Water,
as one of the most important and indispensable small molecules
in vivo, plays a crucial role in driving biological self-assembly
processes. Real-space detection and identification of water-induced
organic structures and further capture of dynamic dehydration processes
are important yet challenging, which would help to reveal the cooperation
and competition mechanisms among water-involved noncovalent interactions.
Herein, introduction of water molecules onto the self-assembled thymine
(T) structures under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions results in
the hydration of hydrogen-bonded T dimers forming a well-ordered water-involved
T structure. Reversibly, a local dehydration process is achieved by in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) manipulation
on single water molecules, where the adjacent T dimers connected with
water molecules undergo a local chiral inversion process with the
hydrogen-bonding configuration preserved. Such a strategy enables
real-space identification and detection of the interactions between
water and organic molecules, which may also shed light on the understanding
of biologically relevant self-assembly processes driven by water.