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1.
Nanoscale ; 8(28): 13678-86, 2016 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27376633

ABSTRACT

Tuning the intermolecular interactions among suitably designed molecules forming highly ordered self-assembled monolayers is a viable approach to control their organization at the supramolecular level. Such a tuning is particularly important when applied to sophisticated molecules combining functional units which possess specific electronic properties, such as electron/energy transfer, in order to develop multifunctional systems. Here we have synthesized two tetraferrocene-porphyrin derivatives that by design can selectively self-assemble at the graphite/liquid interface into either face-on or edge-on monolayer-thick architectures. The former supramolecular arrangement consists of two-dimensional planar networks based on hydrogen bonding among adjacent molecules whereas the latter relies on columnar assembly generated through intermolecular van der Waals interactions. Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) at the solid-liquid interface has been corroborated by cyclic voltammetry measurements and assessed by theoretical calculations to gain multiscale insight into the arrangement of the molecule with respect to the basal plane of the surface. The STM analysis allowed the visualization of these assemblies with a sub-nanometer resolution, and cyclic voltammetry measurements provided direct evidence of the interactions of porphyrin and ferrocene with the graphite surface and offered also insight into the dynamics within the face-on and edge-on assemblies. The experimental findings were supported by theoretical calculations to shed light on the electronic and other physical properties of both assemblies. The capability to engineer the functional nanopatterns through self-assembly of porphyrins containing ferrocene units is a key step toward the bottom-up construction of multifunctional molecular nanostructures and nanodevices.

2.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 52(48): 7608-11, 2016 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27226252

ABSTRACT

We have estimated theoretically the impact of curvature on the free energies of activation and reaction associated with Diels-Alder reactions on carbon-based materials. Significant reduction is observed for both energy values with increasing curvature for core-functionalization, while the opposite trend prevails for edge-functionalization, as further supported by SEM/fluorescence measurements.

3.
Nat Mater ; 14(11): 1123-9, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26366850

ABSTRACT

Much effort over the past decades has been focused on improving carrier mobility in organic thin-film transistors by optimizing the organization of the material or the device architecture. Here we take a different path to solving this problem, by injecting carriers into states that are hybridized to the vacuum electromagnetic field. To test this idea, organic semiconductors were strongly coupled to plasmonic modes to form coherent states that can extend over as many as 10(5) molecules and should thereby favour conductivity. Experiments show that indeed the current does increase by an order of magnitude at resonance in the coupled state, reflecting mostly a change in field-effect mobility. A theoretical quantum model confirms the delocalization of the wavefunctions of the hybridized states and its effect on the conductivity. Our findings illustrate the potential of engineering the vacuum electromagnetic environment to modify and to improve properties of materials.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 13(32): 14302-10, 2011 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21695318

ABSTRACT

Responsive monolayers are key building blocks for future applications in organic and molecular electronics in particular because they hold potential for tuning the physico-chemical properties of interfaces, including their energetics. Here we study a photochromic SAM based on a conjugated azobenzene derivative and its influence on the gold work function (Φ(Au)) when chemisorbed on its surface. In particular we show that the Φ(Au) can be modulated with external stimuli by controlling the azobenzene trans/cis isomerization process. This phenomenon is characterized experimentally by four different techniques, kelvin probe, kelvin probe force microscopy, electroabsorption spectroscopy and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. The use of different techniques implies exposing the SAM to different measurement conditions and different preparation methods, which, remarkably, do not alter the observed work function change (Φ(trans)-Φ(cis)). Theoretical calculations provided a complementary insight crucial to attain a deeper knowledge on the origin of the work function photo-modulation.


Subject(s)
Azo Compounds/chemistry , Gold/chemistry , Membranes, Artificial , Quantum Theory , Azo Compounds/chemical synthesis , Molecular Structure , Particle Size , Photochemical Processes , Stereoisomerism , Surface Properties
5.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 12(17): 4473-80, 2010 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20407721

ABSTRACT

We have devised a novel dip coating procedure to form highly crystalline and macroscopic pi-conjugated architectures on solid surfaces. We have employed this approach to a technologically relevant system, i.e. the electron-acceptor [6,6]-phenyl C61 butyric acid methyl ester molecule (PCBM), which is the most commonly used electron-acceptor in organic photovoltaics. Highly ordered, hexagonal shaped crystals of PCBM, ranging between 1 to 80 mum in diameter and from 20 to 500 nm in thickness, have been grown by dip coating the substrates into a solution containing the fullerene derivative. These crystals have been found to possess a monocrystalline character, to exhibit a hexagonal symmetry and to display micron sized molecularly flat terraces. The crystals have been prepared on a wide variety of surfaces such as SiO(x), silanized SiO(x), Au, graphite, amorphous carbon-copper grids and ITO. Their multiscale characterization has been performed by atomic force microscopy (AFM), Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM, TEM).To test the stability of these electron accepting PCBM crystals, they have been coated with a complementary, electron donor hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene (HBC) derivative by solution processing from acetone and chloroform-methanol blends. The HBC self assembles in a well-defined network of nanofibers on the PCBM substrate, and the two materials can be clearly resolved by AFM and KPFM.Due to its structural precision on the macroscopic scale, the PCBM crystals appear as ideal interface to perform fundamental photophysical studies in electron-acceptor and -donor blends, as well as workbench for unravelling the architecture vs. function relationship in organic solar cells prototypes.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 123(46): 11462-7, 2001 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11707124

ABSTRACT

A series of soluble hexabenzocoronene (HBC) derivatives with pendant optically active (S)-3,7-dimethyloctanyl and (R,S)-3,7-dimethyloctanyl (mixture of stereoisomers) hydrocarbon side chains with and without a phenylene spacer were assembled into differently ordered arrays at the interface between a solution and the basal plane of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). Molecularly resolved scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) images revealed that all derivatives self-assemble into oriented crystals in quasi-two dimensions. However, while for the alkyl-substituted HBCs (1,4) all of the single aromatic cores within a monolayer exhibit the same contrast in the STM, the single aromatic cores with a phenylene group between the alkyl side chains and the aromatic core (2a,2b,3) exhibit different contrasts within a monolayer. For the disks carrying racemic branched or n-alkyl side chains (2b,3) a random distribution of the two different contrasts within the 2D-crystal is observed, while the optically active phenylene-alkyl-substituted HBC (2a) exhibits a periodical distribution of three contrasts within the monolayer. We attribute the different contrasts of the aromatic cores in the presence of the phenylene groups to a loss of the planarity of the whole molecule and different conformations, which allow the conjugated disks to attain different equilibrium positions above the surface of HOPG. In the case of the optically active side chains a regular superstructure with three distinctly different positions such as in a staircase is attained. The self-assembly processes are governed by the interplay of intramolecular as well as intermolecular and interfacial interactions. In the present case, the interactions may induce both the molecules to acquire well distinct positions along the z axis and to adopt different conformations. The reported results open new avenues of exploration. For instance, the different couplings of conjugated molecules with the substrate at different separations can be investigated by means of scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS). Furthermore, experiments on the STM tip-induced switching of single molecules embedded in a monolayer appear feasible.

7.
Chemphyschem ; 2(7): 461-4, 2001 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23696532

ABSTRACT

Model molecular machines can be prepared in solution; their requirements are still more restrictive when anchored onto a surface. Large two-dimensional crystals of [2]catenane were formed on HOPG through self-assembly--the picture shows a 15×15 nm(2) STM image of the surface-bound structure. A comparison with related surface-bound compounds by STM gave insight into the structural requirements for such self-assembly.

8.
Chemistry ; 6(17): 3242-8, 2000 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11003002

ABSTRACT

The self-assembly of lipophilic deoxyguanosine derivatives 1 and 2 has been studied in solution by NMR spectroscopy and ESI-MS (electrospray ionization mass spectrometry). NMR data show the existence of two types of self-assembled, ribbonlike structures (A and B), which are connected at the guanine moieties through two different H-bonded networks. The first species (A), which is stable in the solid state and characterised by cyclic NH(2)-O(6) and NH(1)-N(7) hydrogen bonds, is detected soon after dissolving the polycrystalline powder in rigorously anhydrous CDCl3. In solution it slowly undergoes a structural transition towards a thermodynamically stable ribbon characterised by NH(1)-O(6) and NH(2)-N(3) cyclic hydrogen bonds (B). On the other hand, at surfaces, self-assembled ribbon nanostructures have been grown from solutions of derivative 1 both on mica and at the graphite-solution interface. They have been investigated by means of tapping mode scanning force microscopy (SFM) and scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM), respectively. SFM revealed dry, micrometer-long nanoribbons with a molecular cross-section. while STM imaging at submolecular resolution indicates a molecular packing of type A, like the one detected in the solid state. This indicates that, upon adsorption at the solid-liquid interface, the guanosine moieties undergo a structural rearrangement from a B-type to an A-type ribbon.

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