Biological systems rely on recyclable materials resources such as amino acids, carbohydrates and nucleic acids. When biomaterials are damaged as a result of aging or stress, tissues undergo repair by a depolymerization-repolymerization sequence of remodelling. Integration of this concept into synthetic materials systems may lead to devices with extended lifetimes. Here, we show that a metastable polymer, end-capped poly(o-phthalaldehyde), undergoes mechanically initiated depolymerization to revert the material to monomers. Trapping experiments and steered molecular dynamics simulations are consistent with a heterolytic scission mechanism. The obtained monomer was repolymerized by a chemical initiator, effectively completing a depolymerization-repolymerization cycle. By emulating remodelling of biomaterials, this model system suggests the possibility of smart materials where aging or mechanical damage triggers depolymerization, and orthogonal conditions regenerate the polymer when and where necessary.
Recent advances in algorithms and computational hardware have enabled the calculation of excited states with time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) for large systems of O(1000) atoms. Unfortunately, the aqueous charge transfer problem in TDDFT (whereby many spuriously low-lying charge transfer excited states are predicted) seems to become more severe as the system size is increased. In this work, we concentrate on the common case where a chromophore is embedded in aqueous solvent. We examine the role of exchange-correlation functionals, basis set effects, ground state geometries, and the treatment of the external environment in order to assess the root cause of this problem. We conclude that the problem rests largely on water molecules at the boundary of a finite cluster model, i.e., "edge waters." We also demonstrate how the TDDFT problem can be related directly to ground state problems. These findings demand caution in the commonly employed strategy that rests on "snapshot" cutout geometries taken from ground state dynamics with molecular mechanics. We also find that the problem is largely ameliorated when the range-separated hybrid functional LC-ωPBEh is used.
Molecular mechanisms by which to increase the activity of a mechanophore might provide access to new chemical reactions and enhanced stress-responsive behavior in mechanochemically active polymeric materials. Here, single-molecule force spectroscopy reveals that the force-induced acceleration of the electrocyclic ring opening of gem-dichlorocyclopropanes (gDCC) is sensitive to the stereochemistry of an α-alkene substituent on the gDCC. On the ∼0.1 s time scale of the experiment, the force required to open the E-alkene-substituted gDCC was found to be 0.4 nN lower than that required in the corresponding Z-alkene isomer, despite the effectively identical force-free reactivities of the two isomers and the distance between the stereochemical permutation and the scissile bond of the mechanophore. Fitting the experimental data with a cusp model provides force-free activation lengths of 1.67 ± 0.05 and 1.20 ± 0.05 Å for the E and Z isomers, respectively, as compared to 1.65 and 1.24 Å derived from computational modeling.
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