Abstract
Synthetic molecular motors continue to attract great interest due to their ability to transduce energy into nanomechanical motion, the potential to do work and drive systems out-of-equilibrium. Of particular interest are unidirectional rotary molecular motors driven by chemical fuel or light. Probing the mechanistic details of their operation at the single-molecule level is hampered by the diffraction limit, which prevents the collection of dynamic positional information by traditional optical methods. Here, we use defocused wide-field imaging to examine the unidirectional rotation of individual molecular rotary motors on a quartz surface in unprecedented detail. The sequential occupation of nanomechanical states during the UV and heat-induced cycle of rotation are directly imaged in real-time. The approach will undoubtedly prove important in elucidating the mechanistic details and assessing the utility of novel synthetic molecular motors in the future.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 7156-7159 |
| Number of pages | 4 |
| Journal | Journal of the American Chemical Society |
| Volume | 139 |
| Issue number | 21 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 31-May-2017 |
Keywords
- SINGLE-MOLECULE
- UNIDIRECTIONAL ROTATION
- ROTARY MOTORS
- MACHINES
- ORIENTATION
- EMISSION
- MOTION
- PROBE
- CONTRACTION
- CELL
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