Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1788337 | Current Applied Physics | 2008 | 5 Pages |
We investigate the surface ordering and orientation of a synthetic rigid-flexible block molecule containing a rigid penta-p-phenylene and poly(propylene oxide) flexible chains at the air–water interface. This supramolecular amphiphile self-organizes into a honeycomb-like structure in the bulk, but it behaves differently with the conventional amphiphilies at the air–water interface. Surface pressure–area isotherms, TEM and AFM results show that the rod-coil molecule forms a stable monolayer at the air–water surface. After monolayer collapses, the molecule exhibits island morphology with the (10) layer spacing of ∼18 nm. From these results, we discuss the self-assembling mechanism of microphase separation between the rigid moiety and the flexible segments on the water subphase.