posted on 2011-12-28, 00:00authored byJia Liu, Ting Chen, Xin Deng, Dong Wang, Jian Pei, Li-Jun Wan
The bottom-up fabrication of surface hierarchical nanostructures
is of great importance for the development of molecular nanostructures
for chiral molecular recognition and enantioselective catalysis. Herein,
we report the construction of a series of 2D chiral hierarchical structures
by trinary molecular self-assembly with copper phthalocyanine (CuPc),
2,3,7,8,12,13-hexahexyloxy-truxenone (TrO23), and 1,3,5-tris(10-carboxydecyloxy)
benzene (TCDB). A series of flower-like chiral hierarchical molecular
architectures with increased generations are formed, and the details
of these structures are investigated by high resolution scanning tunneling
microscopy (STM). The flower-like hierarchical molecular architectures
could be described by a unified configuration in which the lobe of
each architecture is composed of a different number of triangular
shape building units (TBUs). The off-axis edge-to-edge packing of
TBUs confers the organizational chirality of the hierarchical assemblies.
On the other hand, the TBUs can tile the surface in a vertex-sharing
configuration, resulting in the expansion of chiral unit cells, which
thereby further modulate the periodicity of chiral voids in the multilevel
hierarchical assemblies. The formation of desired hierarchical structures
could be controlled through tuning the molar ratio of each component
in liquid phase. The results are significant for the design and fabrication
of multicomponent chiral hierarchical molecular nanostructures.