Abstract
CO2 utilization
has been a hot research topic in academic
and industrial respects.
Besides converting CO2 into chemicals and fuels, incorporating it into
the polymers to construct functional materials is another promising strategy.
However, the CO2-involved polymerization techniques should be
further developed. In this work, a facile and efficient CO2-involved
multicomponent polymerization is successfully developed. The reaction of monomers
of CO2, isocyanides and 2-iodoanilines readily produces soluble and
thermally stable poly(benzoyleneurea)s
with well-defined structures under mild conditions. Thanks to the formed amide
groups in the heterocyclic units in the main-chains, the resultant polymers could self-assemble into spheres with sizes between 200
and 1000 nm. The
polymers containing tetraphenylethylene (TPE) unit show the unique aggregation-enhanced
emission (AEE) features, which could be used to visualize the self-assembly process
and morphologies under UV irradiation, and serve as fluorescence probe to selectively and
sensitively detect Au3+ ions. Notably,
the polymers containing cis- and trans-TPE units exhibit different behaviors in self-assembly and
limit of detection for Au3+ ions due to
the different intermolecular interactions. Thus, this work not only provides a
new strategy for CO2 utilization but also furnishes
a series of functional heterocyclic polymers for diverse applications.
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