Type
Text
Type
Dissertation
Advisor
Rudick, Jon G. | Goroff, Nancy S. | Drueckhammer, Dale G. | Stephens, Peter.
Date
2017-08-01
Keywords
Organic chemistry -- Materials Science. | Conjugated Polymer | Host Guest Chemistry | PIEDA | Polydiacetylene | Supramolecular
Department
Department of Chemistry.
Language
en_US
Source
This work is sponsored by the Stony Brook University Graduate School in compliance with the requirements for completion of degree
Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/11401/78130
Publisher
The Graduate School, Stony Brook University: Stony Brook, NY.
Format
application/pdf
Abstract
Polydiacetylenes (PDAs) are 1-dimensional polymers with a carbon-rich ene-yne backbone. Materials scientists are interested in PDAs because they are semiconductors, they have large multiphoton absorptions, and they can be prepared as ordered assemblies in the solid-state. Polydiacetylenes are formed from the topochemical 1,4-polymerization of a monomer unit made up of at least two sequential alkynes. This work describes attempts to form novel polydiacetylenes from several higher order polyyne monomers, as well as efforts to alter the morphology of known polydiacetylenes into thin films. The first project described here examined the formation of cocrystals of diiodohexatriyne with a bis(alkylnitrile) oxalamide host. Diiodohexatriyne undergoes 1,4-topochemical polymerization, with mild heating, to form poly(iodoethynyliododiacetylene), PIEDA. Polymerization was followed by extensive characterization through Raman spectroscopy, solid-state 13C MAS-NMR, and X-ray crystallography. This work represents the first ordered single-crystal to single-crystal 1,4-topochemical polymerization of a triyne, demonstrated through X-ray diffraction. The second project described efforts towards post-polymerization modification on PIEDA. Despite some success in model studies, isolated PIEDA was found to be too unstable to undergo controlled post-polymerization modification. The third project of this work described the demonstration of the formation of thin films of another PDA, polydiiododiacetylene (PIDA). Thin films of PIDA cocrystals could serve as components in solar cells or photovoltaic devices. Using lower concentration and allowing evaporation to occur in a fume hood, nanometer thick films were formed. However, thin films of PIDA cocrystals were too heterogeneous to be used within devices. The fourth project described here examined the preparation of cocrystals of bis(iodobutadiynyl)benzene monomer with several oxalamide hosts. The goal of this project is formation of conjugated ladder polydiacetylenes which have been theorized to have a lower band-gap than analogous linear polydiacetylenes. Cocrystals of monomer bis(iodobutadiynyl)benzene were formed with a variety of oxalamide hosts. Monomer cocrystals were heated at high temperatures and gave Raman signal consistent with polydiacetylene formation. Attempts to analyze heated cocrystals through single crystal X-ray diffraction have failed due to increased mosaicity. Other methods of inducing polymerization have been investigated but no ordered polymerization could be demonstrated. Halogen bonding has been demonstrated to be a reliable interaction for aligning these monomers. However, the polymerization and characterization of resultant polymer remains challenging due to the multiple reaction pathways of these materials. | 230 pages
Recommended Citation
Freitag, Matthew Curtis, "Formation of Novel Polydiacetylenes: Synthesis of Poly(iodoethynyliododiacetylene) and Towards the Formation of Conjugated Ladder Polydiacetylenes" (2017). Stony Brook Theses and Dissertations Collection, 2006-2020 (closed to submissions). 3625.
https://commons.library.stonybrook.edu/stony-brook-theses-and-dissertations-collection/3625