| Literature DB >> 27325099 |
Yuan Fang1, Elke Ghijsens1, Oleksandr Ivasenko1, Hai Cao1, Aya Noguchi2, Kunal S Mali1, Kazukuni Tahara2,3, Yoshito Tobe2, Steven De Feyter1.
Abstract
A dominant theme within the research on two-dimensional chirality is the sergeant-soldiers principle, wherein a small fraction of chiral molecules (sergeants) is used to skew the handedness of achiral molecules (soldiers) to generate a homochiral surface. Here, we have combined the sergeant-soldiers principle with temperature-dependent molecular self-assembly to unravel a peculiar chiral amplification mechanism at the solution-solid interface in which, depending on the concentration of a sergeant-soldiers solution, the majority handedness of the system can either be amplified or entirely reversed after an annealing step, furnishing a homochiral surface. Two discrete pathways that affect different stages of two-dimensional crystal growth are invoked for rationalizing this phenomenon and we present a set of experiments where the access to each pathway can be precisely controlled. These results demonstrate that a detailed understanding of subtle intermolecular and interfacial interactions can be used to induce drastic changes in the handedness of a supramolecular network.Year: 2016 PMID: 27325099 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427