R.D. Murphy, R.O. Watts
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
Room-temperature film balance measurements were used to study the monolayer stability and molecular conformation of third- through fifth-generation poly(benzyl ether) monodendrons with linear oligo(ethylene glycol) tails at the air-water interface. All the third- and fourth-generation monodendrons studied formed stable Langmuir films, but the fifth-generation monodendrons were not stable at 20°C. Monolayers of the smaller dendritic molecules experienced a repeatable collapse to a multilayer upon sufficient compression. Longer hydrophilic tails increased the stability of the Langmuir films. For third- and fourth-generation monodendrons each additional ethylene oxide repeat unit in the tail increased the collapse pressure by 3.1 and 4.1 mN/m, respectively. The molecular area of the monodendrons at the air-water interface increased linearly with molecular weight. Using a simplified cylindrical model, we determined that the dendritic molecules take a vertically elongated shape at the water surface and become flatter as the generation increases. The diameter-to-height ratio ranged from 1/2 to 2/3 for monodendrons of generation three through five. © 1999 American Chemical Society.
R.D. Murphy, R.O. Watts
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
S. Cohen, J.C. Liu, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 1999
E. Burstein
Ferroelectrics
O.F. Schirmer, W. Berlinger, et al.
Solid State Communications