Folded Perylene Diimide Loops as Mechanoresponsive Motifs

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2021 Jul 12;60(29):16191-16199. doi: 10.1002/anie.202105219. Epub 2021 Jun 11.

Abstract

A supramolecular mechanophore that can be integrated into polymers and indicates deformation by a fluorescence color change is reported. Two perylene diimides (PDIs) were connected by a short spacer and equipped with peripheral atom transfer polymerization initiators. In the idle state, the motif folds into a loop and its emission is excimer dominated. Poly(methyl acrylate) (PMA) chains were grown from the motif and the mechanophore-containing polymer was blended with unmodified PMA to afford materials that display a visually discernible fluorescence color change upon deformation, which causes the loops to unfold. The response is instant, and correlates linearly with the applied strain. Experiments with a reference polymer containing only one PDI moiety show that looped mechanophores that display intramolecular excimer formation offer considerable advantages over intermolecular dye aggregates, including a concentration-independent response, direct signaling of mechanical processes, and a more pronounced optical change.

Keywords: excimers; mechanochromic materials; mechanoresponsive materials; polymers; supramolecular mechanophores.