4.6 Article

Supramolecular Assembly of Interfacial Nanoporous Networks with Simultaneous Expression of Metal-Organic and Organic-Bonding Motifs

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 19, Issue 42, Pages 14143-14150

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201301852

Keywords

metal-organic coordination; scanning probe microscopy; self-assembly; porous networks; supramolecular chemistry

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [BA 3395/2-1]
  2. Munich Center for Advanced Photonics (MAP)
  3. Technische Universitat Munchen-Institute for Advanced Study
  4. German Excellence Initiative
  5. ERC Advanced Grant MolArt [247299]
  6. EU through the ERC Starting Grant COL-ORLANDS
  7. FRS-FNRS (FRFC) [2.4.550.09]
  8. FRS-FNRS (MIS) [F.4.505.10.F]
  9. Science Policy Office of the Belgian Federal Government (BELSPO-IAP) [7/05]
  10. TINTIN ARC project [09/14-023]
  11. MIUR through the FIRB Futuro in Ricerca (SUPRA-CARBON) [RBFR10DAK6]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The formation of 2D surface-confined supramolecular porous networks is scientifically and technologically appealing, notably for hosting guest species and confinement phenomena. In this study, we report a scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) study of the self-assembly of a tripod molecule specifically equipped with pyridyl functional groups to steer a simultaneous expression of lateral pyridyl-pyridyl interactions and Cu-pyridyl coordination bonds. The assembly protocols yield a new class of porous open assemblies, the formation of which is driven by multiple interactions. The tripod forms a purely porous organic network on Ag(111), phase , in which the presence of the pyridyl groups is crucial for porosity, as confirmed by molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations. Additional deposition of Cu dramatically alters this scenario. For submonolayer coverage, three different porous phases coexist (i.e., , , and ). Phases and are chiral and exhibit a simultaneous expression of lateral pyridyl-pyridyl interactions and twofold Cu-pyridyl linkages, whereas phase is just stabilized by twofold Cu-pyridyl bonds. An increase in the lateral molecular coverage results in a rise in molecular pressure, which leads to the formation of a new porous phase (epsilon), only coexisting with phase and stabilized by a simultaneous expression of lateral pyridyl-pyridyl interactions and threefold Cu-pyridyl bonds. Our results will open new avenues to create complex porous networks on surfaces by exploiting components specifically designed for molecular recognition through multiple interactions.

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