Liquid Crystalline Pressure-Sensitive Adhesive based on a Shape-Assisted Molecular Assembly with Electron-Deficient Twofold Columnar π-Stacking

20 May 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Recently, the chemistry of supramolecular adhesives has rapidly progressed in materials science and tissue engineering. Many structural motifs with a variety of non-covalent interactions have been proposed for advanced adhesive properties. Here, we propose a new materials class of liquid crystalline pressure-sensitive adhesive (LC-PSA). Without the aid of hydrogen bonding or Coulomb force, a cyclooctatetraene(COT)-fused electron-deficient dipyridophenazine dimer (dppz-FLAP) forms a tight twofold columnar-stacking based on its V-shaped molecular structure (π-π distance: 3.32 Å). With the dppz-FLAP core as a mesogen of liquid crystal, a high shear LC-PSA bearing a well-defined packing structure in a hexagonal columnar phase has been developed. Both hydrophobic and hydrophilic glass substrates can be easily bonded at room temperature by simply pressing a flake sample of the molecular adhesive between the substrates. Tensile shear strengths reached approximately 1 MPa for glass, SUS and Fe substrates based on dispersion interaction with significant ductility, while the easy peelability on a PET tape was confirmed. The rigid columnar structure formed by the shape-assisted assembly results in the high cohesive force of the material, while the soft liquid crystalline properties provide sufficient fluidity as a PSA. Viscoelastic analysis revealed a unique position of the LC-PSA (G′~10^7 Pa, G′′~10^6 Pa) compared with conventional PSAs. The concept of LC-PSA based on the rigid/soft hybridization and hydrogen-bond-free molecular engineering extends the potential of supramolecular adhesives and functional small-molecule materials.

Keywords

Liquid Crystal
Supramolecule
π-Stacking
Adhesive

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Experimental details including synthesis, NMR spectra, HR-MS spectra, X-ray diffraction, rheological measurements, evaluation of adhesion properties, and DFT calculations.
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Movie S1
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Movie showing the adhesion process of dppz-FLAP1.
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