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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(37): 31266-31278, 2017 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28304153

ABSTRACT

In this study, a series of perpendicular lamellae-forming poly(polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane methacrylate-block-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl methacrylate)s (PMAPOSS-b-PTFEMAs) was developed based on the bottom-up concept of creating a simple yet effective material by tailoring the chemical properties and molecular composition of the material. The use of silicon (Si)-containing hybrid high-χ block copolymers (BCPs) provides easy access to sub-10 nm feature sizes. However, as the surface free energies (SFEs) of Si-containing polymers are typically vastly lower than organic polymers, this tends to result in the selective segregation of the inorganic block onto the air interface and increased difficulty in controlling the BCP orientation in thin films. Therefore, by balancing the SFEs between the organic and inorganic blocks through the use of poly(2,2,2-trifluoroethyl methacrylate) (PTFEMA) on the organic block, a polymer with an SFE similar to Si-containing polymers, orientation control of the BCP domains in thin films becomes much simpler. Herein, perpendicularly oriented BCP thin films with a χeff value of 0.45 were fabricated using simple spin-coating and thermal annealing processes under ambient conditions. The thin films displayed a minimum domain size of L0 = 11 nm, as observed via atomic force microscopy (AFM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Furthermore, directed self-assembly (DSA) of the BCP on a topographically prepatterned substrate using the grapho-epitaxy method was used to successfully obtain perpendicularly oriented lamellae with a half pitch size of ca. 8 nm.

2.
J Org Chem ; 73(14): 5248-54, 2008 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18558767

ABSTRACT

The generation of the title cation 2(+) and its reaction under solvolytic and non-nucleophilic conditions were investigated. When the precursor chlorocyclopentadiene 5 was reacted with silica gel that contained water or with anhydrous MeOH, the corresponding 5-hydroxy- and 5-methoxycyclopentadienes (7 and 6) were produced in 68 and 81% yields, respectively. This indicates that 2(+) is formed as an intermediate under solvolytic conditions and persists without any rearrangement of the homoadamantane frameworks, at least during the period before capture by the nucleophile. On the other hand, the abstraction of a chloride ion from 5 by Ag(+) in the absence of a nucleophile at -78 degrees C resulted in the quantitative formation of allyl cation 8(+), incorporated in a bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane framework, via the Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement of a homoadamantane framework. Cation 8(+) was isolated as the SbF6(-) salt, and its structure was determined by X-ray crystallography. Quenching this cation with MeOH afforded a methyl ether 14, with a cyclopentadiene structure retained but one of the homoadamantane frameworks had undergone a structural change by a further Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 127(8): 2641-9, 2005 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15725021

ABSTRACT

Rate constants for the reactions of Laser flash photolytically generated benzhydrylium ions (diarylcarbenium ions) with halide ions have been determined in various solvents, including neat and aqueous acetonitrile as well as some alcohols. Substitution of the rate constants into the correlation equation log k = s(N + E) yields the nucleophilicity parameters N for the halide ions in different solvents. Linear correlations with negative slopes are found between the nucleophilicity parameters N for Cl(-) and Br(-) in different solvents and the solvent ionizing powers Y of the corresponding solvents. Increasing halide solvation reduces the rates of carbocation/chloride combinations by approximately half as much as it increases the rates of ionizations of benzhydryl chlorides. Comparison of the solvent dependent nucleophilicity parameters N of halide anions and the nucleophilicity parameters N(1) for solvents yields a quantitative prediction of common ion rate depression, as demonstrated by the analysis of a variety of literature reported mass-law constants alpha. Combination of the rate constants for the reactions of benzhydrylium ions with halide ions (k(-)()(1)) reported in this work with the ionization constants of benzhydryl halides (k(1)) and the recently reported rate constants for the reactions of benzhydrylium ions with solvents (k(2)) yields complete quantitative free energy profiles for solvolysis reactions. The applicability of Hammond's postulate for interpreting solvolysis reactions can thus be examined quantitatively.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 43(17): 2302-5, 2004 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15108152
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 126(16): 5174-81, 2004 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15099100

ABSTRACT

The rates of the reactions of benzhydrylium ions (diarylcarbenium ions) with solvent mixtures of variable composition (water/acetonitrile, methanol/acetonitrile, ethanol/acetonitrile, ethanol/water, and trifluoroethanol/water) have been determined photometrically by conventional UV-vis spectroscopy, stopped-flow methods, and laser flash techniques. It has been shown that the first-order rate constants follow the previously published relationship log k(20 degrees C) = s(N + E), where E is an empirical electrophilicity parameter, N is an empirical nucleophilicity parameter, and s is a nucleophile-specific slope parameter. From plots of log k versus E of the benzhydrylium ions are derived the solvent nucleophilicity parameters s and N, the latter of which are designated as N1 to emphasize that their use in the quoted correlation equation gives rise to first-order rate constants. A linear correlation between N1 and Kevill's solvent nucleophilicity NT based on S-methyldibenzothiophenium ions is reported, which allows one to interconvert the two sets of data. Because the N1 values are directly comparable to the previously reported nucleophilicity parameters N for pi-systems (www.cup.uni-muenchen.de/oc/mayr/), the systematic design of Friedel-Crafts reactions with solvolytically generated carbocations becomes possible.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(1): 286-95, 2003 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12515531

ABSTRACT

The kinetics of 82 reactions of benzhydrylium ions (Ar(2)CH(+)) with n-nucleophiles has been determined at 20 degrees C. Evaluation by the equation log k = s(N + E) delivered the reactivity parameters N and s for 15 n-nucleophiles (water, hydroxide, amines, etc.). All nucleophiles except water (s = 0.89) and (-)SCH(2)CO(2)(-) (s = 0.43) have closely similar slope parameters (0.52 < s < 0.71), indicating that the reactions of most n-nucleophiles approximately follow Ritchie's constant selectivity relationship (s = constant). The different slope parameter for water is recognized as the main reason for the deviations from the Ritchie relationship reported in 1986. Correlation analysis of the rate constants for the reactions of benzhydrylium ions with the n-nucleophiles (except H(2)O) on the basis of Ritchie's equation log k = N(+) + log k(0) yields a statistically validated set of N(+) parameters for Ritchie-type nucleophiles and log k(0) parameters for benzhydrylium ions. The N and s parameters of the n-nucleophiles derived from their reactions with benzhydrylium ions were combined with literature data for the reactions of these nucleophiles with other carbocations to yield electrophilicity parameters E for tritylium, tropylium, and xanthylium ions. While the E parameters for tropylium and xanthylium ions appear to be generally applicable, it is demonstrated that the E parameters of tritylium ions can be used to predict reactivities toward n-nucleophiles as well as hydride transfer rate constants but not rates for the reactions of tritylium ions with pi-nucleophiles. It is now possible to merge the large data sets determined by Ritchie and others with our kinetic data and present a nucleophilicity scale comprising n- (e.g., amines), pi- (e.g., alkenes and arenes), and sigma-nucleophiles (e.g., hydrides).

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