benzene-1-3-5-tricarboxamide and azobenzene

benzene-1-3-5-tricarboxamide has been researched along with azobenzene* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for benzene-1-3-5-tricarboxamide and azobenzene

ArticleYear
Stimulus-responsive azobenzene supramolecules: fibers, gels, and hollow spheres.
    Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids, 2013, May-14, Volume: 29, Issue:19

    Novel, stimulus-responsive supramolecular structures in the form of fibers, gels, and spheres, derived from an azobenzene-containing benzenetricarboxamide derivative, are described. Self-assembly of tris(4-((E)-phenyldiazenyl)phenyl)benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxamide (Azo-1) in aqueous organic solvent systems results in solvent dependent generation of microfibers (aq DMSO), gels (aq DMF), and hollow spheres (aq THF). The results of a single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of Azo-1 (crystallized from a mixture of DMSO and H2O) reveal that it possesses supramolecular columnar packing along the b axis. Data obtained from FTIR analysis and density functional theory (DFT) calculation suggest that multiple hydrogen bonding modes exist in the Azo-1 fibers. UV irradiation of the microfibers, formed in aq DMSO, causes complete melting while regeneration of new fibers occurs upon visible light irradiation. In addition to this photoinduced and reversible phase transition, the Azo-1 supramolecules display a reversible, fiber-to-sphere morphological transition upon exposure to pure DMSO or aq THF. The role played by amide hydrogen bonds in the morphological changes occurring in Azo-1 is demonstrated by the behavior of the analogous, ester-containing tris(4-((E)-phenyldiazenyl)phenyl)benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylate (Azo-2) and by the hydrogen abstraction in the presence of fluoride anions.

    Topics: Azo Compounds; Benzamides; Crystallography, X-Ray; Gels; Macromolecular Substances; Models, Molecular; Molecular Structure; Particle Size; Porosity; Surface Properties

2013