Publication | Closed Access
Controlled Self‐Assembly of Organic Nanowires and Platelets Using Dipolar and Hydrogen‐Bonding Interactions
48
Citations
37
References
2008
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyEngineeringMolecular Self-assemblyChemistryStructural SimilarityNanowire LengthNanostructure SynthesisOrganic NanowiresMaterials SciencePlatelets Using DipolarNanotechnologyMolecular MaterialHydrogen BondingHydrogen‐bonding InteractionsNanomaterialsNatural SciencesSelf-assemblyNanofabricationMolecule-based MaterialNanostructures
Synergistic dipole-dipole and hydrogen-bonding interactions are used to assemble nanostructured materials. Precipitation of a hydrogen-bonding donor-acceptor molecule 8-[[p-[bis(ethyl)amino]phenyl]azo]-isobutylflavin (ABFL) yields nanowires approximately 50-150 nm in diameter and lengths of several millimeters. Precipitation of the non-hydrogen-bonding analog, methylated ABFL (MABFL), generates micrometer-sized hexagonal platelets that are 5-10 microm in length, 1-5 microm in width, and 0.1-0.5 microm thick. The structural similarity of the two molecules allows intermediate morphologies to be formed via co-precipitation. Doping experiments demonstrate efficient control over nanowire length and diameter due to the disruption of the hydrogen bonding within the nanowires.
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