Engineering supramolecular artificial edifices designed for a specific function

1994 
Abstract The Langmuir-Blodgett technique and its variants (alternate layers, self-organising mixtures, the semi-amphiphilic technique, the peculiar solid state chemistry in L.B. films) are collective methods which allow physical chemists, with a very small amount of synthetic chemistry, to build up molecular assemblies exhibiting not only the properties of each of their components, but also extra properties which arise from the architecture: cooperativity, anomalous chemical properties, molecular recognition, etc. These new tailored molecular edifices are the basic “brick” of tomorrow's molecular electronics and fine chemistry. These strategies are exemplified here by two active supramolecular edifices which have been successfully designed and built up: an artificial dioxygen trap based on the same principle as hemoglobin, and one molecule thick conductors. Promising applied results have already been obtained in the field of gas sensing with these new conductors, owing to molecular architectural amplification.
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