| Literature DB >> 26849384 |
Julian A Lloyd1, Anthoula C Papageorgiou1, Sybille Fischer1, Seung Cheol Oh1, Özge Saǧlam1, Katharina Diller1,2, David A Duncan1, Francesco Allegretti1, Florian Klappenberger1, Martin Stöhr2, Reinhard J Maurer2, Karsten Reuter2, Joachim Reichert1, Johannes V Barth1.
Abstract
Bisphenol A (BPA) aggregates on Ag(111) shows a polymorphism between two supramolecular motifs leading to formation of distinct networks depending on thermal energy. With rising temperature a dimeric pairing scheme reversibly converts into a trimeric motif, which forms a hexagonal superstructure with complex dynamic characteristics. The trimeric arrangements notably organize spontaneously into a self-assembled one-component array with supramolecular BPA rotors embedded in a two-dimensional stator sublattice. By varying the temperature, the speed of the rotors can be controlled as monitored by direct visualization. A combination of scanning tunneling microscopy and dispersion-corrected density-functional tight-binding (DFTB-vdW(surf)) based molecular modeling reveals the exact atomistic position of each molecule within the assembly as well as the driving force for the formation of the supramolecular rotors.Entities:
Keywords: Self-assembly; dispersion-corrected density-functional tight-binding; rotor arrays; scanning tunneling microscopy; silver surface
Year: 2016 PMID: 26849384 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b05026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189