| Literature DB >> 28926223 |
Kai Sun1, Ji-Yong Luo1, Xin Zhang1, Zhi-Jian Wu2, Ying Wang2, Hong-Kuan Yuan1, Zu-Hong Xiong1, Shao-Chun Li3, Qi-Kun Xue4, Jun-Zhong Wang1.
Abstract
Molecular motors are nanoscale machines that convert external energies into controlled mechanical movements. In supramolecular motors, the rotator and stator are held together mechanically, and thus the rotation can be essentially barrier free when molecular conformation is negligible. However, nearly all the supramolecular motors appeared in solutions or host-guest complexes. Surface-mounted supramolecular motors have rarely been addressed, even though they are easily manipulated by external fields. Here we report a surface-mounted supramolecular motor assembled by charge states and hydrogen bonds. On a graphite surface, individual ethanol clusters can be charged with a scanning tunneling microscopy tip and then trap the ethanol chains with a permanent dipole moment. Serving as a rotator, the trapped ethanol chains rotate around a charged cluster driven by the inelastic tunneling electrons. Random rotation in clockwise or anticlockwise direction occurs in the chiral molecular chains through chiral flipping. Directional rotation with clockwise chirality can be realized by introducing a chiral branch to the near end of ethanol chains to suppress the chiral flipping with steric hindrance.Entities:
Keywords: charge state; chiral flipping; ethanol; hydrogen bond; supramolecular motors
Year: 2017 PMID: 28926223 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b04811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881