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Award ID contains: 1435195

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  1. Abstract The development of stimuli‐responsive materials suitable for use in wearable sensors is a key unresolved challenge. Liquid crystals (LCs) are particularly promising, as they do not require power, are light‐weight, and can be tuned to respond to a range of targeted chemical stimuli. Here, an advance is reported in the design of LCs for chemical sensors with the discovery of LCs that assume parallel orientations at free surfaces and yet retain their chemoresponsiveness. The resulting LC‐based sensors are more sensitive and exhibit faster responses than previous LC sensor designs. 
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  2. Abstract Surface‐supported liquid crystals (LCs) that exhibit orientational and thus optical responses upon exposure to ppb concentrations of Cl2gas are reported. Computations identified Mn cations as candidate surface binding sites that undergo redox‐triggered changes in the strength of binding to nitrogen‐based LCs upon exposure to Cl2gas. Guided by these predictions, μm‐thick films of nitrile‐ or pyridine‐containing LCs were prepared on surfaces decorated with Mn2+binding sites as perchlorate salts. Following exposure to Cl2, formation of Mn4+(in the form of MnO2microparticles) was confirmed and an accompanying change in the orientation and optical appearance of the supported LC films was measured. In unoptimized systems, the LC orientational transitions provided the sensitivity and response times needed for monitoring human exposure to Cl2gas. The response was also selective to Cl2over other oxidizing agents such as air or NO2and other chemical targets such as organophosphonates. 
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  3. Abstract Computational chemistry‐guided designs of chemoresponsive liquid crystals (LCs) with pyridine or pyrimidine groups that bind to metal‐cation‐functionalized surfaces to provide improved selective responses to targeted vapor species (dimethylmethylphosphonate (DMMP)) over nontargeted species (water) are reported. The LC designs against experiments are tested by synthesizing 4‐(4‐pentyl‐phenyl)‐pyridine and 5‐(4‐pentyl‐phenyl)‐pyrimidine and quantifying LC responses to DMMP and water. Consistent with the computations, pyridine‐containing LCs bind to metal‐cation‐functionalized surfaces too strongly to permit a response to either DMMP or water whereas pyrimidine‐containing LCs undergo a surface‐driven orientational transition in response to DMMP without interference from water. The computation predictions are not strongly dependent on assumptions regarding the degree of coordination of the metal ions but are limited in their ability to predict LC responses when using cations with mostly empty d orbitals. Overall, this work identifies a promising new class of chemoresponsive LCs based on pyrimidine that exhibits enhanced tolerance to water, a result that is important because water is a ubiquitous and particularly challenging chemical interferent in chemical sensing strategies based on LCs. The work also provides further evidence of the transformative utility of computational chemistry methods to design LC materials that exhibit selective orientational responses in specific chemical environments. 
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  4. We report a combined theoretical and experimental effort to elucidate systematically for the first time the influence of anions of transition metal salt-decorated surfaces on the orientations of supported films of nematic liquid crystals (LCs) and adsorbate-induced orientational transitions of these LC films. Guided by computational chemistry predictions, we find that nitrate anions weaken the binding of 4′- n -pentyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile (5CB) to transition metal cations, as compared to perchlorate salts, although binding is still sufficiently strong to induce homeotropic (perpendicular) orientations of 5CB. In addition, we find the orientations of the LC to be correlated across all metal cations investigated by a molecular anchoring energy density that is calculated as the product of the single-site binding energy and metal cation binding site density on the surface. The weaker single-site binding energy caused by nitrate also facilitates competitive binding of adsorbates to the metal cations, leading to more facile orientational transitions induced by adsorbates. Finally, our analysis suggests that nitrate anions recruit water via hydrogen bonding to the metal binding sites, modulating further the relative net binding energies of 5CB and adsorbates to surfaces decorated with metal nitrates. After accounting for the presence of water, we find a universal exponential relationship between the calculated displacement free energies and measured dynamic response of LCs to adsorbates for all metal salts studied, independent of the metal salt anion. 
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