4.6 Article

Self-Assembly of N3-Substituted Xanthines in the Solid State and at the Solid-Liquid Interface

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 29, Issue 24, Pages 7283-7290

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la304540b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ERC [GA-257305]
  2. International Center for Frontier Research in Chemistry (icFRC)
  3. COST Action [MP0802]
  4. HPC-EUROPA2 [228398]
  5. European Commission [OTKA 73672]
  6. Hungarian Academy of Sciences [TAMOP 4.2.1/B-09/1/KONV-2010-0007]
  7. MIUR (Italy) [2009N5JH4F]
  8. European Social Fund
  9. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO-CW)
  10. National Research School Combination - Catalysis (NRSC-C)

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The self-assembly of small molecular modules interacting through noncovalent forces is increasingly being used to generate functional. structures and materials for electronic, catalytic, and biomedical applications. The greatest control over the geometry in H-bond supramolecular architectures, especially in H-bonded supramolecular polymers, can be achieved by exploiting the rich programmability of artificial nucleobases undergoing self-assembly through strong H bonds. Here N-3-functionalized xanthine modules are described, which are capable of self-associating through self-complementary H-bonding patterns to form H-bonded supramolecular ribbons. The self-association of xanthines through directional H bonding between neighboring molecules allows the controlled generation of highly compact ID supramolecular polymeric ribbons on graphite. These architectures have been characterized by scanning tunneling microscopy at the solid liquid interface, corroborated by dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT) studies and X-ray diffraction.

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