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A macrocyclic monomer with two opposing 1,8-diazaanthracene units is polymerized in a single crystal by a photochemically induced [4 + 4] cycloaddition reaction between neighboring monomers in which the anthracene units are stacked face-to-face at the critical Schmidt distance. The severe structural changes associated with this are minimized by the monomer design, wherein the linkers between the two opposing photoreactive 1,8-diazaanthracene units are connected to the 4 and 5 positions of the latter, whose spatial positioning is changed the least during dimerization. This helps to keep the monomer's overall shape basically unchanged during the polymerization. The resulting new rigid-rod polymer is soluble in its protonated form, and after counterion exchange with a surfactant, it can be depolymerized back into monomer upon relatively mild thermal treatment (120 °C) in an organic solvent.

Citation

Ming Li, A Dieter Schlüter, Junji Sakamoto. Solid-state photopolymerization of a shape-persistent macrocycle with two 1,8-diazaanthracene units in a single crystal. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2012 Jul 18;134(28):11721-5


PMID: 22694341

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