Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy
University of Pennsylvania
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Nature | 2002
Virgil Percec; Martin Glodde; Tushar K. Bera; Yoshiko Miura; Irina Shiyanovskaya; Kenneth D. Singer; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Paul A. Heiney; Ingo Schnell; Almut Rapp; Hans Wolfgang Spiess; Steven D. Hudson; H Duan
The discovery of electrically conducting organic crystals and polymers has widened the range of potential optoelectronic materials, provided these exhibit sufficiently high charge carrier mobilities and are easy to make and process. Organic single crystals have high charge carrier mobilities but are usually impractical, whereas polymers have good processability but low mobilities. Liquid crystals exhibit mobilities approaching those of single crystals and are suitable for applications, but demanding fabrication and processing methods limit their use. Here we show that the self-assembly of fluorinated tapered dendrons can drive the formation of supramolecular liquid crystals with promising optoelectronic properties from a wide range of organic materials. We find that attaching conducting organic donor or acceptor groups to the apex of the dendrons leads to supramolecular nanometre-scale columns that contain in their cores π-stacks of donors, acceptors or donor–acceptor complexes exhibiting high charge carrier mobilities. When we use functionalized dendrons and amorphous polymers carrying compatible side groups, these co-assemble so that the polymer is incorporated in the centre of the columns through donor–acceptor interactions and exhibits enhanced charge carrier mobilities. We anticipate that this simple and versatile strategy for producing conductive π-stacks of aromatic groups, surrounded by helical dendrons, will lead to a new class of supramolecular materials suitable for electronic and optoelectronic applications.
Nature | 2004
Virgil Percec; Andrés E. Dulcey; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Yoshiko Miura; Jan Smidrkal; Mihai Peterca; Sami Nummelin; Ulrica Edlund; Steven D. Hudson; Paul A. Heiney; Hu Duan; Sergei N. Magonov; Sergei A. Vinogradov
Natural pore-forming proteins act as viral helical coats and transmembrane channels, exhibit antibacterial activity and are used in synthetic systems, such as for reversible encapsulation or stochastic sensing. These diverse functions are intimately linked to protein structure. The close link between protein structure and protein function makes the design of synthetic mimics a formidable challenge, given that structure formation needs to be carefully controlled on all hierarchy levels, in solution and in the bulk. In fact, with few exceptions, synthetic pore structures capable of assembling into periodically ordered assemblies that are stable in solution and in the solid state have not yet been realized. In the case of dendrimers, covalent and non-covalent coating and assembly of a range of different structures has only yielded closed columns. Here we describe a library of amphiphilic dendritic dipeptides that self-assemble in solution and in bulk through a complex recognition process into helical pores. We find that the molecular recognition and self-assembly process is sufficiently robust to tolerate a range of modifications to the amphiphile structure, while preliminary proton transport measurements establish that the pores are functional. We expect that this class of self-assembling dendrimers will allow the design of a variety of biologically inspired systems with functional properties arising from their porous structure.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Mihai Peterca; Mohammad R. Imam; Cheol-Hee Ahn; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Daniela A. Wilson; Brad M. Rosen; Virgil Percec
The synthesis, structural, and retrostructural analysis of two libraries containing 16 first and second generation C(3)-symmetric self-assembling dendrimers based on dendrons connected at their apex via trisesters and trisamides of 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylic acid is reported. A combination of X-ray diffraction and CD/UV analysis methods demonstrated that their C(3)-symmetry modulates different degrees of packing on the periphery of supramolecular structures that are responsible for the formation of chiral helical supramolecular columns and spheres self-organizable in a diversity of three-dimensional (3D) columnar, tetragonal, and cubic lattices. Two of these periodic arrays, a 3D columnar hexagonal superlattice and a 3D columnar simple orthorhombic chiral lattice with P222(1) symmetry, are unprecedented for supramolecular dendrimers. A thermal-reversible inversion of chirality was discovered in helical supramolecular columns. This inversion is induced, on heating, by the change in symmetry from a 3D columnar simple orthorhombic chiral lattice to a 3D columnar hexagonal array and, on cooling, by the change in symmetry from a 2D hexagonal to a 2D centered rectangular lattice, both exhibiting intracolumnar order. A first-order transition from coupled columns with long helical pitch, to weakly or uncorrelated columns with short helical pitch that generates a molecular rotator, was also discovered. The torsion angles of the molecular rotator are proportional to the change in temperature, and this effect is amplified in the case of the C(3)-symmetric trisamide supramolecular dendrimers forming H-bonds along their column. The structural changes reported here can be used to design complex functions based on helical supramolecular dendrimers with different degree of packing on their periphery.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2004
Vojislava Pophristic; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Michael L. Klein
The Al13 polymer, Al13O4(OH)24(H2O)12Cl7, is thought to be a major component of the aluminum chlorohydrate (ACH) polymer system. Although it plays important roles in various aluminum chlorohydrate applications, its structure is not well understood. We combine ab initio molecular dynamics simulations in both the gas-phase and aqueous solution, with small angle X-ray scattering experiments on a bulk ACH sample to determine the structure of Al13-mer. We find that Al13 entity is roughly spherical (∼10 A diameter), with a central tetrahedral Al3+ ion surrounded by four shells consisting of O, OH and H2O groups. Our ab initio molecular dynamics studies indicate that such a structure is stable on the picosecond time scale in an aqueous environment.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Virgil Percec; Jonathan G. Rudick; Mihai Peterca; Martin Wagner; Makoto Obata; Catherine M. Mitchell; Wook-Dong Cho; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Paul A. Heiney
Angewandte Chemie | 2005
Virgil Percec; Mohammad R. Imam; Tushar K. Bera; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Mihai Peterca; Paul A. Heiney
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004
Virgil Percec; Catherine M. Mitchell; Wook-Dong Cho; Satoshi Uchida; Martin Glodde; Goran Ungar; Xiangbing Zeng; Yongsong Liu; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Paul A. Heiney
Angewandte Chemie | 2003
Virgil Percec; Martin Glodde; Gary Johansson; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Paul A. Heiney
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Virgil Percec; Mohammad R. Imam; Mihai Peterca; Daniela A. Wilson; Robert Graf; Hans Wolfgang Spiess; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Paul A. Heiney
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2006
Virgil Percec; Martin Glodde; Mihai Peterca; Almut Rapp; Ingo Schnell; Hans Wolfgang Spiess; Tushar K. Bera; Yoshiko Miura; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Emad Aqad; Paul A. Heiney