Abstract
The development of new advanced functional materials from low-molecular-weight gelators and their new potential applications have occupied a considerable place in research. The present study involves the design of dipeptide-based organogelators with enhanced hydrogen bonding network potentials and phase-selective capacities, possessing a minimum gelation concentration of 0.2-0.4% w/v in different fluids. Seven new dipeptide organogelators were prepared based on a one-step reaction from two-component salt forms, the combination of Nε-alkanoyl-L-lysine ethyl ester with N-alkanoyl-L-amino acids (L-alanine, L-leucine, and L-phenylalanine), with high yields of up to 90. All the gel materials were extremely stable at room temperature, having a shelf life of several months, and formed gels in pharmaceutical fluids such as ethyl palmitate, ethyl myristate, and ethyl laurate, 1,2-propanediol, and liquid paraffin (oils widely used in pharmaceutical formulations), which meet the criteria of biological materials delivery. Their gelation properties were evaluated by rheological measurements. A very significant breakthrough in the current study is that organogels remove the toxic dye, crystal violet (CV), from water in a phase-selective manner with an extremely low gelator concentration. The dye and gelators are successively recovered via ethanol precipitation after the completion of the phase extraction process. Molecular dynamic calculations provide evidence for the 3D structures of the gels.