Self-Assembled Two-Dimensional Nanoporous Crystals as Molecular Sieves: Molecular Dynamics Studies of 1,3,5-Tristyrilbenzene-Cn Superstructures.
2020
Due
to their unique
geometry complex, self-assembled nanoporous
2D molecular crystals offer a broad landscape of potential applications,
ranging from adsorption and catalysis to optoelectronics, substrate
processes, and future nanomachine applications. Here we report and
discuss the results of extensive all-atom Molecular Dynamics (MD)
investigations of self-assembled organic monolayers (SAOM) of interdigitated
1,3,5-tristyrilbenzene (TSB) molecules terminated by alkoxy peripheral
chains Cn containing n carbon atoms
(TSB3,5-Cn) deposited onto highly ordered pyrolytic
graphite (HOPG). In vacuo structural and electronic
properties of the TSB3,5-Cn molecules were initially
determined using ab initio second order Moller–Plesset
(MP2) calculations. The MD simulations were then used to analyze the
behavior of the self-assembled superlattices, including relaxed lattice
geometry (in good agreement with experimental results) and stability
at ambient temperatures. We show that the intermolecular disordering
of the TSB3,5-Cn monolayers arises from competition
between decreased rigidity of the alkoxy chains (loss of intramolecular
order) and increased stabilization with increasing chain length (afforded
by interdigitation). We show that the inclusion of guest organic molecules
(e.g., benzene, pyrene, coronene, hexabenzocoronene) into the nanopores
(voids formed by interdigitated alkoxy chains) of the TSB3,5-Cn superlattices stabilizes the superstructure, and we highlight
the importance of alkoxy chain mobility and available pore space in
the dynamics of the systems and their potential application in selective
adsorption.
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