Prof. Michael Ryan Hansen share the latest research and applications of solid-state NMR in polymers
At the invitation of AISMST, Prof. Michael Ryan Hansen from Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster visited us and gave a talk titled “From Molecules to Polymers: Insights on Molecular Packing, Conformation and Dynamics from Solid-State NMR”.
Prof. Michael Ryan Hansen from Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
Polymers with extended π-conjugation are currently of broad scientific interest due to their promising applications as the active semiconducting material in flexible organic electronic devices. Solution processing can be used to fabricate π-conjugated polymer films, but it is generally semi-crystalline and lack long-range order, rendering it difficult to access the molecular organization using traditional approaches like XRD.
Audience attending the Lecture
Prof. Hansen introduced a general strategy for obtaining the information of molecular packings through a combination of XRD, quantum calculation and solid-state NMR experiments. Such strategy is well applied in P3HT, donner-acceptor polymers, macrocyclic molecules and so on.
Discussion
In the final, Prof. Hansen introduced a solid-state NMR method to obtain the site-specific information of molecular motions in discotic liquid crystal systems.
This talk covers a very broad subjects in solid-state NMR and polymers, which well demonstrates that solid-state NMR is a very powerful tool for elucidating the structures and dynamics in polymers.
Source from South China Advanced Institute for Soft Matter Science and Technology