4.8 Article

Localized, Stepwise Template Growth of Functional Nanowires from an Amino Acid-Supported Framework in a Microfluidic Chip

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 818-826

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn4054864

Keywords

molecular nanomaterials; flow; template synthesis; amino acids; molecular electronics

Funding

  1. MINECO, Spain [CTQ2010-16339, MAT2012-30994, CTQ2011-16009-E]
  2. DGR, Catalonia [2009 SGR 158]
  3. MINECO [RYC-2011-08071, RYC-2010-06530]
  4. European Community [PCIG-11-GA-2012-32139]
  5. CSIC
  6. European Social Fund (ESF)
  7. GICSERV-B Program: 8th call, IMB-CNM-CSIC, Spain [NGG-261]
  8. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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A spatially controlled synthesis of nanowire bundles of the functional crystalline coordination polymer (CP) Ag(I)TCNQ (tetracyanoquinodimethane) from previously fabricated and trapped monovalent silver CP (Ag(I)Cys (cysteine)) using a room-temperature microfluidic-assisted templated growth method is demonstrated. The incorporation of microengineered pneumatic clamps in a two-layer polydimethylsiloxane-based (PDMS) microfluidic platform was used. Apart from guiding the formation of the Ag(I)Cys coordination polymer, this microfluidic approach enables a local trapping of the in situ synthesized structures with a simple pneumatic damp actuation. This method not only enables continuous and multiple chemical events to be conducted upon the trapped structures, but the excellent fluid handling ensures a precise chemical activation of the amino add-supported framework in a position controlled by interface and damp location that leads to a site-specific growth of Ag(I)TCNQ nanowire bundles. The synthesis is conducted stepwise starting with Ag(I)Cys CPs, going through silver metal, and back to a functional CP (Ag(I)TCNQ); that is, a novel microfluidic controlled ligand exchange (CP -> NP -> CP) is presented. Additionally, the pneumatic clamps can be employed further to integrate the conductive Ag(I)TCNQ nanowire bundles onto electrode arrays located on a surface, hence facilitating the construction of the final functional interfaced systems from solution specifically with no need for postassembly manipulation. This localized se-supported growth of functional matter from an amino add-based CP shows how sequential localized chemistry in a fluid cell can be used to integrate molecular systems onto device platforms using a chip incorporating microengineered pneumatic tools. The control of clamp pressure and in parallel the variation of relative flow rates of source solutions permit deposition of materials at different locations on a chip that could be useful for device any preparation. The in situ reaction and washing procedures make this approach a powerful one for the fabrication of multicomponent complex nanomaterials using a soft bottom-up approach.

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