Dipolar rotors orderly aligned in mesoporous fluorinated organosilica architectures

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2015 Apr 13;54(16):4773-7. doi: 10.1002/anie.201412412. Epub 2015 Feb 16.

Abstract

New mesoporous covalent frameworks, based on hybrid fluorinated organosilicas, were prepared to realize a periodic architecture of fast molecular rotors containing dynamic dipoles in their structure. The mobile elements, designed on the basis of fluorinated p-divinylbenzene moieties, were integrated into the robust covalent structure through siloxane bonds, and showed not only the rapid dynamics of the aromatic rings (ca. 10(8) Hz at 325 K), as detected by solid-state NMR spectroscopy, but also a dielectric response typical of a fast dipole reorientation under the stimuli of an applied electric field. Furthermore, the mesochannels are open and accessible to diffusing in gas molecules, and rotor mobility could be individually regulated by I2 vapors. The iodine enters the channels of the periodic structure and reacts with the pivotal double bonds of the divinyl-fluoro-phenylene rotors, affecting their motion and the dielectric properties.

Keywords: NMR spectroscopy; dielectric spectroscopy; hybrid materials; molecular rotors; porous materials.