The self-assembly of multiple molecular components into complex supramolecular architectures is ubiquitous in nature and constitutes one of the most powerful strategies to fabricate multifunctional nanomaterials making use of the bottom-up approach. When spatial confinement in two dimensions on a solid substrate is employed, this approach can be exploited to generate periodically ordered structures from suitably designed molecular tectons. In this study we demonstrate that physisorbed directional periodic arrays of monometallic or heterobimetallic coordination polymers can be generated on a highly oriented pyrolitic graphite surface by combinations of a suitably designed directional organic tecton or metallatecton based on a porphyrin or nickel(II) metalloporphyrin backbone bearing both a pyridyl unit and a terpyridyl unit acting as coordinating sites for CoCl2. The periodic architectures were visualized at the solid/liquid interface with a submolecular resolution by scanning tunneling microscopy and corroborated by combined density functional and time-dependent density functional theory calculations. The capacity to nanopattern the surface for the first time with two distinct metallic centers exhibiting different electronic and optical properties is a key step toward the bottom-up construction of robust multicomponent and, thus, multifunctional molecular nanostructures and nanodevices.

Nanopatterning of Surfaces with Monometallic and Heterobimetallic 1D Coordination Polymers: A Molecular Tectonics Approach at the Solid/Liquid Interface / M. El Garah, N. Marets, M. Mauro, A. Aliprandi, S. Bonacchi, L. De Cola, A. Ciesielski, V. Bulach, M.W. Hosseini, P. Samori. - In: JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0002-7863. - 137:26(2015), pp. 8450-8459. [10.1021/jacs.5b02283]

Nanopatterning of Surfaces with Monometallic and Heterobimetallic 1D Coordination Polymers: A Molecular Tectonics Approach at the Solid/Liquid Interface

L. De Cola;
2015

Abstract

The self-assembly of multiple molecular components into complex supramolecular architectures is ubiquitous in nature and constitutes one of the most powerful strategies to fabricate multifunctional nanomaterials making use of the bottom-up approach. When spatial confinement in two dimensions on a solid substrate is employed, this approach can be exploited to generate periodically ordered structures from suitably designed molecular tectons. In this study we demonstrate that physisorbed directional periodic arrays of monometallic or heterobimetallic coordination polymers can be generated on a highly oriented pyrolitic graphite surface by combinations of a suitably designed directional organic tecton or metallatecton based on a porphyrin or nickel(II) metalloporphyrin backbone bearing both a pyridyl unit and a terpyridyl unit acting as coordinating sites for CoCl2. The periodic architectures were visualized at the solid/liquid interface with a submolecular resolution by scanning tunneling microscopy and corroborated by combined density functional and time-dependent density functional theory calculations. The capacity to nanopattern the surface for the first time with two distinct metallic centers exhibiting different electronic and optical properties is a key step toward the bottom-up construction of robust multicomponent and, thus, multifunctional molecular nanostructures and nanodevices.
porphyrins bearing pyridyl; N-oxide groups; electronic-structure; networks; design; complexes; arrays; frameworks; chemistry; spectra
Settore CHIM/03 - Chimica Generale e Inorganica
2015
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
jacs.5b02283.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 8.07 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
8.07 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/791527
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus 30
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 27
social impact