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Nano
Research...Nano-Forschung
Nano Onderzoek
www.nanotsunami.com
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Scientists
Discover How to Flip a Molecular Switch

Image :
Sequential STM images of FAPPB/R1ATC9 obtained
at alternating sample biases of +1.0 and
-1.0 V. The majority of the FAPPB molecules
(apparent protrusions, displayed as bright
spots) switch conductance states between
OFF at +1.0 V and ON at -1.0 V sample bias.
The red and green boxes follow one FAPPB
molecule that exhibits this bias dependence.
Imaging conditions: 4000 ‰ × 4000 ‰,
I = 2 pA. Credit: Lewis et al
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17
November 2005 —A means for controlling single-molecule
switches by engineering their design and surrounding
environment has been developed by a research team
led by scientists at Penn
State , Rice University ,
and the University
of Oregon . The research demonstrates that single-molecule
switches can be tailored to respond in predictable
and stable ways, depending on the direction of the
electric field applied to them--while some switches
were engineered to turn on, others were engineered
to turn off in response to the same applied electric
field. The discovery, which is an essential step
in the emerging field of molecular electronics, could
further the development of nano-components--as small
as molecules or atoms--for use in future generations
of computers and other electronic devices.
A
paper describing the research results, titled "Molecular
Engineering of the Polarity and Interactions of Molecular
Electronic Switches," will be published in the Journal
of the American Chemical Society on 21 December
2005. "This research confirms our hypothesis of how
single-molecule switches work," says Penn State Professor
of Chemistry and Physics Paul
S. Weiss , whose lab tested the molecules. "Molecular
switches eventually may become integrated into real
electronics, but not until after someone discovers
a way to wire them." In addition to Weiss, the research
team includes Penelopie Lewis of Penn State, who
now is at Columbia
University ; James Tour and Francisco Maya at
Rice University; and James Hutchison and Christina
Inman at the University of Oregon.
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Credit: Lewis et al.
Figure 1 (Top) Structures of the OPE molecules used
in this study: PPB, NPPB, FNPPB, FNPPB-o, and FAPPB.
(Middle) Amide-containing alkanethiol matrix molecules
used in this study: 1ATC9 and R1ATC9. (Bottom) Schematic
showing a hypothesized mechanism for the bias-dependent
induced switching. (Bottom left) At negative sample
bias, electrostatic repulsion between the positive
charge of the STM tip and the positive dipole of
the OPE molecule can cause the OPE to tilt into the
OFF state, allowing for hydrogen bonding to occur
between the substituent of the OPE (-X) and the amide
groups of 1ATC9. (Bottom right) At positive sample
bias, the electrostatic attraction between the negative
tip and the positive dipole explains the preference
for the ON state.
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The
research is the latest achievement in the team's
ongoing studies of a family of stiff, stringy molecules
known as as OPEs--oligo phenylene-ethynylenes--which
the scientists have tailored in a number of ways
to have a variety of physical, chemical, and electronic
characteristics. The potential for using these OPE
molecules as switches had been limited by their troublesome
tendency to turn on and off at random, but Weiss
and his colleagues recently discovered a way to reduce
this random switching. In their current research,
the scientists demonstrated, with a number of definitive
experiments, how and why it is possible to control
these molecular switches.
To
study the properties of individual OPE molecules,
the scientists first inserted them into a hairbrush-like
matrix of similarly shaped molecules, which Weiss
describes as a "self-assembled amide-containing alkanethiol
monolayer." One end of each molecular "bristle" is
attached to the thin gold base of the microscopic
hairbrush. With the individual OPE molecules surrounded
by the matrix of alkanethiol molecules, all anchored
in gold, Weiss and his team were able to study the
properties of the OPE molecules with a powerful scanning
tunneling microscope (STM). The molecules were synthesized
in Tour's lab at Rice University and the matrix was
synthesized in Hutchinson's lab at the University
of Oregon.
The
team synthesized a variety of OPE molecules, some with
a large dipole--the difference in strength and polarity
of the electric charge between one end of the molecule
and the other--and others with a weaker dipole. Some
of the OPE molecules were designed to have a positive
charge on the end facing away from the gold base while
others were designed to have a negative charge at that
end. Weiss's lab found that the tip of the microscope
pulled an OPE molecule up higher than the surrounding
matrix--or "on"--if the
OPE molecule had a sufficiently strong dipole and if
the charge of its exposed end was opposite that of
the STM tip, making the two electrically attractive. "The
OPEs that we engineered to have the strongest dipoles
are the most reliable," Weiss says. The
researchers also found that if the charge of
the STM tip was the same as that on the end of
an OPE, and therefore electrically repulsive, the
molecule was pushed down--or "off"--causing it to lean sideways into the matrix. They
discovered that this position alters the molecule's interaction with the system's
gold base, changing the system's electrical conductance. "When the molecule
is tilted over, electrons have a harder time going through this bond, so the
switch is more resistive," Weiss explains. |

This watercolor painting by Raghuveer Parthasarathy,
a member of Jay Groves research group, shows a hybrid
interface between a living T cell and a synthetic
membrane on a substrate that has been patterned with
chromium lines. T cell receptors (TCRs) are communicating
with their corresponding signaling ligands on the
membrane. By controlling the spatial arrangements
of the signaling ligands, scientists can control
the T cell's overall response.
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The
scientists also demonstrated that it is important
to engineer the chemical environment, as well as
the electronic environment, that surrounds the OPE
molecule. "We repositioned a nitro group attached
on the side of one of the varieties of OPE switches
so it had a strong-enough dipole and could interact
with the amide groups on the surrounding matrix molecules
through hydrogen bonding," Weiss says. The team also
redesigned the matrix so it would be able to interact
better with the new functionality of this repositioned
group. The team's studies show that interactions
of the molecular switches with the surrounding matrix
molecules have a big effect on how long switches
stayed in the on or off state, which is critical
for information storage. These states remain stable
and can be read back for hours in the systems that
Weiss and his colleagues designed, assembled, and
measured. "These chemical interactions stabilize
the "on" and "off" states, reducing random switching," Weiss
reports.
"With
these studies, we have been able to confirm that
we now have the predictive power to design molecular
switches that can be turned on or off at will, which
was a critical test of our understanding of their
function."
This research was funded, in part, by the Army
Research Office (ARO) , Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) , Department
of Energy (DOE) , National
Science Foundation (NSF) , National
Institutes of Standards and Technology (NIST) ,
and Office of
Naval Research (ONR) .
CONTACTS:
Paul S. Weiss: (+1) 814-865-3693, < stm@psu.edu >
Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO): (+1) 814-863-4682, < science@psu.edu >
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This
story has been adapted from a news release -
Diese Meldung basiert auf einer Pressemitteilung -
Deze
tekst is gebaseerd op een nieuwsbericht - |
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