September
02, 2005 --- Twisted
nanostructures are an important biological motif
- just think of the DNA double helix or proteins
with helical sections important to their function.
Researchers are anxious to produce artificial helices,
which could be useful in nanotechnological applications.
Korean researchers have now successfully created
a molecular system that can even form helices “on
demand,” turning the initially liquid solution into
a gel.
A team at Yonsei University in Seoul, Korea, headed
by Myongsoo Lee, have developed a special type of
molecule as the basic building block for their helices.
This involves a base consisting of three aromatic
rings which is bent like a boomerang. The central
ring has a long, branched side-chain hanging from
it. When a silver salt is added to a solution of
these molecules, complexes form between the molecules
and the positively charged silver ions; the “boomerangs” really get
a hold on the silver ions. If the negatively charged counterion in the silver
salt is boron tetrafluoride (BF 4 - ), the complexes pile up into long, twisted
columns. The BF 4 – ions fit exactly into the cavity that remains inside the “belly” of
the helices and stabilize them. This results in a surprise: The liquid turns
into a jelly-like mass. How does this happen? It turns out that the helices
aggregate into regular bundles of fibers, which get tangled up with each other
to form an interwoven, three-dimensional network. The liquid remains trapped
inside this fibrous framework; this forms a gel, a kind of intermediate between
a liquid and a solid. If a fluoride salt is then added to the gel, it liquefies.
This is a result of the enormous attraction of the fluoride ions (F - ) for
the silver ions, which are lured out of their complexes. The fibrous aggregates
collapse back into individual molecules. This effect is reversible if the fluoride
ions are trapped by the addition of other salts.
If salts containing the C 2 F 5 CO 2 - ion are added to the gel, it also
liquefies. Electron microscopy images show that in this case, the phenomenon
has a different cause. The complexes do not fall apart into individual molecules,
but form a different structure instead. Instead of interwoven helical columns,
they form individual zigzagging bands. The reason for this change in structure
is the difference in size of the anions: C 2 F 5 CO 2 - is bigger than BF
4 - and thus does not fit into the cavity inside the helices, which are thus
not stabilized. The result of all this is the birth of a new type of “intelligent” nanomaterial
whose properties can be switched solely by the choice of counterion.
Author: Myongsoo Lee, Yonsei University, Seoul (Korea), link
Title: Stimuli-Responsive Gels from Reversible Coordination Polymers
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2005, 44 , 5810, doi:
10.1002/anie.200501270
Contact:
Editorial office
angewandte@wiley-vch.de
David Greenberg (US)
dgreenbe@wiley.com
Julia Lampam (UK)
jlampam@wiley.co.uk
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