Chemical and entropic control on the molecular self-assembly process

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作者
Daniel M. Packwood
Patrick Han
Taro Hitosugi
机构
[1] Advanced Institute for Materials Research (WPI-AIMR),California NanoSystems Institute and Departments of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Materials Science and Engineering
[2] Tohoku University,undefined
[3] Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences (WPI-iCeMS),undefined
[4] Kyoto University,undefined
[5] Japan Science and Technology Agency (PRESTO),undefined
[6] University of California,undefined
[7] Los Angeles,undefined
[8] School of Materials and Chemical Technology,undefined
[9] Tokyo Institute of Technology,undefined
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Molecular self-assembly refers to the spontaneous assembly of molecules into larger structures. In order to exploit molecular self-assembly for the bottom-up synthesis of nanomaterials, the effects of chemical control (strength of the directionality in the intermolecular interaction) and entropic control (temperature) on the self-assembly process should be clarified. Here we present a theoretical methodology that unambiguously distinguishes the effects of chemical and entropic control on the self-assembly of molecules adsorbed to metal surfaces. While chemical control simply increases the formation probability of ordered structures, entropic control induces a variety of effects. These effects range from fine structure modulation of ordered structures, through to degrading large, amorphous structures into short, chain-shaped structures. Counterintuitively, the latter effect shows that entropic control can improve molecular ordering. By identifying appropriate levels of chemical and entropic control, our methodology can, therefore, identify strategies for optimizing the yield of desired nanostructures from the molecular self-assembly process.
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