| Literature DB >> 33075118 |
Charles Lochenie1, Alberto Insuasty1, Tommaso Battisti1, Luca Pesce2, Andrea Gardin3, Claudio Perego2, Mike Dentinger1, Di Wang4, Giovanni M Pavan5, Alessandro Aliprandi1, Luisa De Cola6.
Abstract
We describe, for a single platinum complex bearing a dipeptide moiety, a solvent-driven interconversion from twisted to straight micrometric assembled structures with different chirality. The photophysical and morphological properties of the aggregates have been investigated as well as the role of the media and concentration. A real-time visualization of the solvent-driven interconversion processes has been achieved by confocal microscopy. Finally, atomistic and coarse-grained simulations, providing results consistent with the experimental observations, allow to obtain a molecular-level insight into the interesting solvent-responsive behavior of this system.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33075118 PMCID: PMC8251519 DOI: 10.1039/d0nr04524a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790
Fig. 1Chemical structure of the Pt(ii) complex Pt-PyAG.
Fig. 2SEM images of the nanoribbons (A & B) and of the twisted fibres (C & D) of Pt-PyAG.
Fig. 3Absorption, excitation, and emission spectra of Pt-PyAG in ACN at 10−4 M (top) and in TCE at 10−3 M (bottom).
Absorption (λabs), excitation (λexc) and emission (λem) maxima, excited-state lifetime (τ), and photoluminescent quantum yield (ΦPL) of Pt-PyAG in ACN and TCE
| Fiber | Solvent | Conc. [mol L−1] |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ribbon-like | ACN | 10−4 | 340 | 334, 384, 403, 423 | 460, 490, 521 | 2.33 | 0.065 |
| 0.22 | |||||||
| Twisted | TCE | 10−3 | 388, 405, 427 | 389, 413, 431 | 464, 491, 523 | 4.41 [83%] | 0.06 |
| 0.75 [17%] | 0.34 |
Excitation at 375 nm.
Solid state measurements.
Fig. 4Absorption spectra of a solution or suspensions of PyAG in ACN at 10−3 M (black), Pt-PyAG nanoribbons in ACN (blue) at 10−4 M and of twisted fibers in TCE (green) at 10−3 M and CD (dashed lines) spectra of their respective films.
Fig. 5Emission quantum yield (λexc = 350 nm) vs. solvent composition (TCE/ACN) upon dilution (upper plot); snapshots at 0, 45, and 90 min of the Movie 1† visualizing the real time conversion from chiral to achiral structures.
Fig. 6Multiscale molecular simulations of Pt-PyAG in the various solvents. (A) AA model for monomer Pt-PyAG. (B) Self-assembly of 20 initially dispersed Pt-PyAG AA-monomers seen along 500 ns of AA-MD simulations (left: drop of the number of disassembled clusters in solution over time). Right: The AA-MD simulations demonstrate that while the number of tail–tail H-bonds increases as the self-assembly proceeds in TCE (green), H-bonding is negligible in ACN. (C) CG model for monomer Pt-PyAG, which was used to simulate self-assembly in TCE, ACN and octane (OCT) solvents. (D and E) Self-assembly of 400 initially dispersed Pt-PyAG CG-monomers in apolar solvents seen along 1 μs of CG-MD simulation. The CG-MD shows that in OCT (D) the monomers self-assemble into helical fibres composed of ∼5–6 stacks where the helix pitch is found p ∼ 30 nm. While in these fibres the peptide tails are gathered in the fibre interior (E, in red), in TCE the helical pitch is increased to ∼120 nm (in good agreement with the experiments). (F) CG-MD simulations of 400 dispersed Pt-PyAG CG-monomers in CG-ACN that self-assemble into long filaments interacting hierarchically via core–core interactions. (G) CG model of a Pt-PyAG bilayer, showing very high stability during a CG-MD in CG-ACN.