The present invention relates to a method for generating a porous network of supramolecular mechanical devices and to its use. Further, the present invention relates to a porous network of supramolecular mechanical devices and to its use.
In recent years, devices characterized by their multi-stable behaviour have been strongly in the focus of research. Herein, the approaches were manifold: Chemists developed highly sophisticated synthetic strategies that allowed for the construction of various bi- or multi-stable molecules in solution and the bulk state. Triggered by external stimuli such as photons or electric fields, electronic and conformational states or these (interlocked) molecules can be switched reversibly. On solid surfaces, physicists induced reversible conformational changes and isomerization of single molecules with local probe techniques such as Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) or Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). Apart from these purely intramolecular switches, it has recently been shown that by manually placing individual molecules via STM into specific arrangements on surfaces highly complex and functional logical circuits can be engineered. These entities reflect examples of supramolecular switches which can be operated on the molecular level and are based on the interplay between single molecules.
Unfortunately, so far it was not possible to provide highly complex supramolecular switches that can be fabricated by a natural self-engineering process without further need for manual construction.
It is therefore an objective of the present invention to provide a method for generating a porous network of supramolecular mechanical devices and a porous network of supramolecular mechanical devices that avoid the aforementioned drawbacks.
These objectives are achieved by a method for generating a porous network of supramolecular mechanical devices, comprising the steps of:
a) providing self-organizing molecules comprising connecting bonds and side-groups;
b) generating a two-dimensional layer of said molecules on an unstructured surface, wherein self-organizing leads to an at least partially regular network of cells, each cell comprising a number of said self-organizing molecules and each cell offering a functional center; and
c) further depositing a predefined amount of said self-organizing molecules and/or of other functional molecules on said two-dimensional layer, wherein these further deposited molecules accommodating in said functional centers of said cells, one or more of said further deposited molecules per cell, wherein said further deposited molecule comprises a multi-stable architecture together with the cell hosting the further deposited molecule.
This method provides a rotary device that offers on a large scale a bottom-up self assembly of the self-organizing molecules that result in a nanoporous network comprising single supramolecular devices that can be addressed individually and switched by changing molecular orientation. Such rotary switching device is at low cost a very flexible and powerful nanodevice that can be largely used in molecular electronic applications, such as for the purpose of storing information or for the purpose of generating intelligent functional surfaces with switching surface for transport, reflectivity, emissivity or absorption purposes taking benefit from the multi-stable architecture.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the multi-stable architecture is designed to allow at least two different status of the further deposited molecule together with the hosting cell in view of its electronic, mechanic, opto-electronic and/or opto-mechanic properties.
The self-organizing molecules can preferably be selected from a group containing porphyrin, porphyrin derivates, coronenes, coronene derivates, phtalo-cyanines, phtalo-cyanine derivates, deca-cyclines and deca-cycline derivates. Said compounds show due to their planar intra-molecular binding structure a large affinity to self-assemble in two dimensional structures when functionalized accordingly.
Appropriate properties of the side group are definitely required for the self-assembly of the ring-shaped structures. Therefore, preferred side groups that offer to direct the inter-molecular binding of the molecules are, for example, polar groups or hydrogen bonds. Hydrogen bonding can be achieved by arrays with one, two, three and up to four hydrogen bonds. Other preferred sidegroups are multipolar interactions such as CN . . . CN, C═O . . . CO bindings or weak hydrogen bonds formed by C—H groups, in particular aromatic C—H such as C—H . . . NC, CH . . . N (pyridine). Further, also halogen bonding (CN . . . X (X=S, Cl, Br, I) or C═O . . . X and N (pyridine . . . X) with X the same as in the first case can be considered to be valuable. And last but not least, quadrupolar interactions such as phenyl . . . perfluorphenyl can be also considered as possible sidegroup binding mechanisms.
As an preferred embodiment of the present invention the self-organizing molecules may be specially designed porphyrin molecules that arrange in a way that the polar group of a side-group of one porphyrin molecule points to a polar group of a side-group of a neighboring porphyrin molecule. This means in a further preferred embodiment that the side group is a cyano-phenyl porphyrin molecule points to the center of the phenyl ring of the cyano-phenyl group of a neighboring porphyrin molecule.
Furthermore, the unstructured surface is also essential for the deposition of the self-organizing molecules and their self-organizing capabilities. Therefore, the unstructured surface is preferably selected from a group containing metallic surfaces, ionic surfaces, ceramic surfaces and any mixtures of the foregoing surfaces. For an example, the unstructured surface is a metallic crystal surface being [001] or [111]-oriented surface, such as a Cu surface. Further, the unstructured surface can be an ionic crystalline NaCl and/or KCl surface. Furthermore, the unstructured surface is a silicon surface, preferably passivated by hydrogen fluoride treatment or similar [the same surface is achieved if—in the vacuum H2 is dosed to the freshly prepared Si(111)].
To address the supramolecular rotary switching devices, a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention may switch the orientation of the molecule accommodated in the nanopore center by an electric stimulation of said molecule at a predefined temperature or at a temperature below a predefined temperature. For example, said molecule may be stimulated by a local probe as they are contained in STM (Scanning tunneling microscopy) or SFM (Scanning Force Microscopy) instruments. The probe thereby induces energy into the addressed device, which is pre-determined to induce switching processes between different states of the device entity.
With respect to an optimized relationship between the amount of nanopore centers available to be occupied by further deposited molecules, it has shown that the amount of further deposited molecules shall be preferably less or equal to the amount required for one mono-layer. Therefore, any effect according over-occupation of the nanopore centers, stacking of molecule and the like can be thus eliminated.
Further preferred embodiment of the present invention can be taken from the remaining dependent claims.
Preferred embodiment of the present invention are hereinafter described in detail by reference to the following drawings which depicts in:
These porphyrin molecules have been vapor-deposited under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions on an atomically clean and flat Cu(111) surface. At low coverage the porphyrins self-assemble into a two-dimensional porous network that was studied by STM at temperatures between 77 K and 297 K. As investigated by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM), the resulting porous nanostructure is illustrated in
Detailed view of a single molecule inside the porphyrin network. A transparent model of porphyrin is included to show the location of the molecule. d) Model of the network. Each pore consists of six molecules with the di-tert butyl groups building the wings of the windmill structure. Therefore, one molecule contributes to two neighboring pores.
a now depicts that in the STM images each nanopore center appears as a chiral windmill-shaped structure consisting of six wings. Each wing itself can be resolved by high resolution imaging into two separated spots. Because of the chirality of the pores one can find two homochiral domains where the wings are pointing either clockwise or counterclockwise (see
Nevertheless, it is known that in STM images the inner-molecular distances can appear drastically reduced by a combination of molecule bending and a rotation of the di-tert butyl groups. Therefore, the conclusion was that these spots belong to one single porphyrin molecule trapped horizontally on top of a nanopore center. As the underlying nanopore center has a hexagonal symmetry the uplying molecule can take six different positions separated by a rotational angle of 60 degrees. Because of the symmetry of the molecule itself only three of these positions are distinguishable. In
After heating up to 112 K the uplying molecules appeared as two opposing spots (
At a temperature of 115 K the structure of the uplying molecules appears very fuzzy (
As the rotor is embedded into a nanoporous network its position is well known. Therefore, each switch can be selectively addressed and rotated by the STM tip. For this purpose the tip was placed over a switch and the parameters were adjusted to bring the tip close to the rotor. Then, it was circled in constant-current mode above the nanopore center with feedback still activated.
To induce energy more precisely an alternative method was used. Two sets of tip-parameters were defined, one with a higher voltage (1.5 V) and lower current (10 pA) and one with a lower voltage (700 mV) and a higher current (150 pA). The first set was applied to place the tip over a nanopore center where switching should be induced. Then, the second set was activated for approximately one second with feedback still activated.
The found molecular rotor has shown to be a very flexible and powerful nanodevice. It consists of only seven equal porphyrin molecules. The underlying nanopore consisting of six molecules serves simultaneously as stator. The rotor is build out of a single uplying porphyrin molecule. Starting at a temperature of 112 K the rotor rotates by thermal energy. Because of its six quantized positions it can be seen as a brownian ratchet although unidirectional movement could not be observed. At lower temperatures the rotation can be externally induced by an electrical current. The device therefore reminds of a mechanical rotary switch that might one day be used as a gate to switch between different molecular wires. The same characteristic in connection to the well known positioning in a molecular array makes the rotary switch a promising candidate for a molecular mass storage device that has even three distinguishable and stable states. Because of the bottom-up building approach all devices show the same characteristics and are atomically equal. The amount of defects is very small compared to using nowadays top-down approach to manufacture similarly sized structures. Detrition has never been observed and is not to be expected. Therefore, the successful design of the molecular rotary switch can be seen a breakthrough in nanoscale devices and molecular electronics.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/006008 | 7/6/2007 | WO | 00 | 1/14/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60831111 | Jul 2006 | US |