Literature DB >> 19072706

Surface confined metallosupramolecular architectures: formation and scanning tunneling microscopy characterization.

Shan-Shan Li1, Brian H Northrop, Qun-Hui Yuan, Li-Jun Wan, Peter J Stang.   

Abstract

Metallosupramolecular compounds have attracted a great deal of attention over the past two decades largely because of their unique, highly complex structural characteristics and their potential electronic, magnetic, optical, and catalytic properties. These molecules can be prepared with relative ease using coordination-driven self-assembly techniques. In particular, the use of electron-poor square-planar Pt(II) transition metals in conjunction with rigid, electron-rich pyridyl donors has enabled the spontaneous self-assembly of a rich library of 2D metallacyclic and 3D metallacage assemblies via the directional-bonding approach. With this progress in the preparation and characterization of metallosupramolecules, researchers have now turned their attention toward fully exploring and developing their materials properties. Assembling metallosupramolecular compounds on solid supports represents a vitally important step toward developing their materials properties. Surfaces provide a means of uniformly aligning and orienting these highly symmetric metallacycles and metallacages. This uniformity increases the level of coherence between molecules above that which can be achieved in the solution phase and provides a way to integrate adsorbed layers, or adlayers, into a solid-state materials setting. The dynamic nature of kinetically labile Pt(II)-N coordination bonds requires us to adjust deposition and imaging conditions to retain the assemblies' stability. Toward these aims, we have used scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) to image these adlayers and to understand the factors that govern surface self-assembly and the interactions that influence their structure and stability. This Account describes our efforts to deposit 2D rectangular and square metallacycles and 3D trigonal bipyramidal and chiral trigonal prism metallacages on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) and Au(111) substrates to give intact assemblies and ordered adlayers. We have investigated the effects of varying the size, symmetry, and dimensionality of supramolecular adsorbates, the choice of substrate, the use of a molecular template, and the effects of chirality. Our systematic investigations provide insights into the various adsorbate-adsorbate and substrate-adsorbate interactions that largely determine the architecture of each assembly and affect their performance in a materials setting. Rational control over adlayer formation and structure will greatly enhance the potential of these supramolecules to be used in a variety of applications such as host-guest sensing/diagnostic systems, molecular electronic devices, and heterogeneous stereoselective synthesis and catalysis.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19072706      PMCID: PMC2654282          DOI: 10.1021/ar800117j

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  45 in total

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7.  Control of supramolecular rectangle self-assembly with a molecular template.

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9.  Structural comparison of self-organized adlayers of ligands and their metal-coordinated complexes on a Au(111) surface: an STM study.

Authors:  Qun-Hui Yuan; Li-Jun Wan
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2006-03-20       Impact factor: 5.236

10.  Supramolecular assemblies of a bis(terpyridine) ligand and of its [2x2] grid-type Zn(II) and Co(II) complexes on highly ordered pyrolytic graphite.

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2.  Self-assembled arene-ruthenium-based rectangles for the selective sensing of multi-carboxylate anions.

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Review 3.  Metal-organic frameworks and self-assembled supramolecular coordination complexes: comparing and contrasting the design, synthesis, and functionality of metal-organic materials.

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Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2012-11-02       Impact factor: 60.622

4.  From solvolysis to self-assembly.

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Journal:  J Org Chem       Date:  2009-01-02       Impact factor: 4.354

5.  Concentration-dependent rhombitrihexagonal tiling patterns at the liquid/solid interface.

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6.  Ultrastructural characterizations of DNA nanotubes using scanning tunneling and atomic force microscopes.

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Journal:  J Microsc Ultrastruct       Date:  2015-09-28

7.  Probing the crystallographic orientation of two-dimensional atomic crystals with supramolecular self-assembly.

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  7 in total

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