4.8 Article

Supramolecular Architectures on Surfaces Formed through Hydrogen Bonding Optimized in Three Dimensions

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 4, Issue 7, Pages 4097-4109

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn100450q

Keywords

hydrogen bonding; self-assembly; molecular modeling; scanning tunneling microscopy; Lander molecule

Funding

  1. IST
  2. NMP
  3. EST
  4. Danish Ministry for Science, Technology and Innovation
  5. Danish Research Councils
  6. Villum Kahn Foundation
  7. Carlsberg Foundation

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Supramolecular self-assembly on surfaces, guided by hydrogen bonding interactions, has been widely studied, most often involving planar compounds confined directly onto surfaces in a planar two-dimensional (2-D) geometry and equipped with structurally rigid chemical functionalities to direct the self-assembly. In contrast, so-called molecular Landers are a class of compounds that exhibit a pronounced three-dimensional (3-D) structure once adsorbed on surfaces, arising from a molecular backboard equipped with bulky groups which act as spacer legs. Here we demonstrate the first examples of extended, hydrogen-bonded surface architectures formed from molecular Landers. Using high-resolution scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) under well controlled ultrahigh vacuum conditions we characterize both one-dimensional (1-D) chains as well as five distinct long-range ordered 2-D supramolecular networks formed on a Au(111) surface from a specially designed Lander molecule equipped with dual diamino-triazine (DAT) functional moieties, enabling complementary NH center dot center dot center dot N hydrogen bonding. Most interestingly, comparison of experimental results to STM image calculations and molecular mechanics structural modeling demonstrates that the observed molecular Lander-DAT structures can be rationalized through characteristic intermolecular hydrogen bonding coupling motifs which would not have been possible in purely planar 2-D surface assembly because they involve pronounced 3-D optimization of the bonding configurations. The described 1-D and 2-D patterns of Lander-DAT molecules may potentially be used as extended molecular molds for the nucleation and growth of complex metallic nanostructures.

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