Scientists
at the University of California, Riverside showed that
L. P. Hammett's 1937 prediction of the strength of different
acids is directly transferable to the activation of
individual molecules on metal surfaces using the tip
of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) as a nanoscale
actuator.
Hammett's original prediction is a cornerstone of physical
organic chemistry, which laid the foundation for many
quantitative structure activity relationships that are
now widely used in fields such as drug design and environmental
toxicology.
Ludwig
Bartels, an assistant professor of chemistry at UCR,
used an STM to demonstrate that Hammett's concepts
still hold true at a scale where molecules are individually
guided one at a time and step-by-step through a chemical
reaction.
An
STM acquires the height profile of a surface at the
atomic scale by guiding a needle across the surface
in a process similar to how a blind person reads Braille.
The dots it can resolve are no larger than individual
atoms or molecules. Thus, it enables scientists to
see images of individual atoms and molecules on metal
and semiconductor surfaces. The same needle tip used
for scanning can inject tailored electrical pulses
into molecules that render portions of them reactive
by modifying their chemical make up.
Bartels
led a team of researchers whose findings are published
in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National
Academies of Science in a paper titled Measurement
of a Linear Free Energy Relationship One Molecule
at a Time. Co-authors with Bartels are UCR graduate
student Ki-Young Kwon, who performed the data analysis
and interpretation, as well as UCR postdoctoral researchers
Bommisetty Rao, who performed the bulk of the experiments,
and Anwei Liu, who developed the Scanning Tunneling
Microscope used for the experiments.
In
detail, Bartels and his team found that identical
electrical pulses activate the thiol group of benzenethiol
molecules more or less readily depending on the nature
and the position of substituents (such as bromine
atoms or methyl moieties) on their benzene ring.
The
activity of thiol groups is used to anchor molecules
to metal electrodes in virtually all molecular electronics
schemes proposed so far. The benzenethiols used in
Bartels' study comprise a good model system for molecules
used in molecular electronics and these findings may
support future nanoscale assembly of "molectronic"
devices - using molecular systems in electronics instead
of silicon.
In
2000, researchers - including UCR's Bartels - found
that the STM can assemble individual biphenyl molecules
from elementary building blocks (iodobenzene) by a
sequence of activation of the building blocks and
transfer of the activated blocks to close proximity
so that they can bind to one another chemically. But
because scientists lacked control of the activation
of potential building blocks, little progress has
been made toward the assembly of larger and more useful
molecules.
The
new technique now shows how scientists can fine-tune
the reactivity of groups of molecules.
"Ultimately,
this may guide us how we can modify the linking groups
in our starting molecules so that we can activate
them separately, which will then allow us to activate
one group, attach another molecule and, after that
is accomplished, activate another group, so that we
can attach a third molecule, and so on...," Bartels
said.
The
new finding offers a route to the design of building
blocks whose reactivity is tailored to optimize the
atomic-scale construction of complex and functional
molecules on surfaces.
Related Links
Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences Web site: http://www.pnas.org/
Ludwig Bartels' faculty Web site: http://www.chem.ucr.edu/faculty/bartels/bartels.html
Bartels Group Lab Web site: http://chem.ucr.edu/groups/bartels/
The University of California, Riverside is a major
research institution and a national center for the
humanities. Key areas of research include nanotechnology,
genomics, environmental studies, digital arts and
sustainable growth and development. With a current
undergraduate and graduate enrollment of more than
17,000, the campus is projected to grow to 21,000
students by 2010. Located in the heart of inland Southern
California, the nearly 1,200-acre, park-like campus
is at the center of the region's economic development.
Visit www.ucr.edu or call 951UCR-NEWS (827-6397) for
more information.
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