Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Fluorinated chains, polycatenars

For polycatenar hydrogen bonded complexes with fluorinated chains at both ends (e.g., 138,139, see Fig. 36) formation of columnar phases was observed [246]. However, compound 137, having a branched Rp-chain at one end and three RH-chains at the other has a sequence of three distinct phases in the unusual sequence Cub-Col-SmA-Iso. For the SmA phase of compound 137 a structure with intercalated aromatic cores and RF-chains and separated layers of the hydrocarbon chains was proposed. At lower temperature, when incompatibility rises and the aromatics and Rp-chains disintegrate, all three components form their own layers. However, this produces interface curvature and a columnar phase with square lattice is formed. On further cooling a transition to a cubic phase with Im3m lattice takes place which is most likely of the bicontinuous type [262]. This leads to the unusual phase sequence Cubv-Col-SmA where the positions of the Cubv and Col phases are exchanged with respect to the usually observed phase sequences. The Col-Cub transition at lower temperature could be the result of the decreased conformational disorder of the terminal chains which reduces the steric frustration and hence reduces the interface curvature. [Pg.52]

LC phases usually corresponds to at least the number of attached chains [258]. Moreover, no SmA phases were observed for non-fluorinated polycatenar mesogens, whereas chain fluorination obviously enables the formation of SmA phases, which are most probably of the de Vries type. It seems that non-fluorinated polycatenars are mainly stabilized by core-core interactions, whereas the mesophase stabilization by the fluorophobic effect retains the layer structure even if core-core interactions are relatively weak. [Pg.53]

So what about the cubic phase In polycatenar systems, it is possible to rationalize the formation of cubic phases on the basis of surface curvature alone, which will be considered in subsequent sections. However, it can be argued that, for calamitic systems, these arguments do not hold—at least on their own—and that other factors are important. For example, if cubic-phase formation is due to surface curvature, it is not possible to explain why an Sa phase (lamellar and with no surface curvature) is seen at higher temperatures. An important factor is the presence of specific intermolecular interactions and in the case of the silver systems, these are the intermolecular electrostatic interactions resulting from the presence of formally ionic groups. This is consistent with the observation of cubic phases in the biphenylcarboxylic acids and hydrazines (Fig. 29), as well as with other materials. However, it is also evident that this is not the only factor, as no cubic phase is seen with anion chains shorter than DOS, while other studies with fluorinated alkoxystilbazoles showed that the position of fluorine substitution could determine the presence or absence of the mesophase observed in the unsubstituted derivatives (56). Thus, structural factors are clearly not negligible. [Pg.190]


See other pages where Fluorinated chains, polycatenars is mentioned: [Pg.2025]    [Pg.2025]    [Pg.978]    [Pg.1503]    [Pg.1889]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.52]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.875 ]




SEARCH



Fluorinated chain

© 2024 chempedia.info