Watching Molecular Nanotubes Self-Assemble in Real Time

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7 Citaten (Scopus)
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Samenvatting

Molecular self-assembly is a fundamental process in nature that can be used to develop novel functional materials for medical and engineering applications. However, their complex mechanisms make the short-lived stages of self-assembly processes extremely hard to reveal. In this article, we track the self-assembly process of a benchmark system, double-walled molecular nanotubes, whose structure is similar to that found in biological and synthetic systems. We selectively dissolved the outer wall of the double-walled system and used the inner wall as a template for the self-reassembly of the outer wall. The reassembly kinetics were followed in real time using a combination of microfluidics, spectroscopy, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, molecular dynamics simulations, and exciton modeling. We found that the outer wall self-assembles through a transient disordered patchwork structure: first, several patches of different orientations are formed, and only on a longer time scale will the patches interact with each other and assume their final preferred global orientation. The understanding of patch formation and patch reorientation marks a crucial step toward steering self-assembly processes and subsequent material engineering.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)22494–22503
Aantal pagina's10
TijdschriftJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume145
Nummer van het tijdschrift41
Vroegere onlinedatum6-okt.-2023
DOI's
StatusPublished - 18-okt.-2023

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