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Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes

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Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes. / Ashwell, Geoff; Williams, Aled T.; Barnes, Susan A. et al.
In: The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Vol. 115, No. 10, 17.03.2011, p. 4200-4208.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ashwell, G, Williams, AT, Barnes, SA, Chappell, S, Phillips, LJ, Robinson, B, Urasinska-Wojcik, B, Wierzchowiec, P, Gentlee, IR & Wood, B 2011, 'Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes', The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, vol. 115, no. 10, pp. 4200-4208. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp200006j

APA

Ashwell, G., Williams, A. T., Barnes, S. A., Chappell, S., Phillips, L. J., Robinson, B., Urasinska-Wojcik, B., Wierzchowiec, P., Gentlee, I. R., & Wood, B. (2011). Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 115(10), 4200-4208. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp200006j

Vancouver

Ashwell G, Williams AT, Barnes SA, Chappell S, Phillips LJ, Robinson B et al. Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 2011 Mar 17;115(10):4200-4208. doi: 10.1021/jp200006j

Author

Ashwell, Geoff ; Williams, Aled T. ; Barnes, Susan A. et al. / Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes. In: The Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 2011 ; Vol. 115, No. 10. pp. 4200-4208.

Bibtex

@article{fc5a3662cb214633bc051cd2071d9f4b,
title = "Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes",
abstract = "The stepwise synthesis of molecular wires on goldnanoparticles and gold electrodes has been performed using amino-terminated and aldehyde-terminated thiols as anchoring groups to provide surface-active sites for imino coupling. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy provides evidence that 4-mercaptoaniline (1) binds via either substituent, Au−S−C6H4−NH2 (N 1s, 400.1 eV) or Au−N(H2)−C6H4−SH (N 1s, 399.1 eV), therefore depleting the number of reactive amine sites at the surface. In contrast, 4-[(4-mercaptophenylimino)methyl]benzaldehyde (2) binds exclusively via a thiolate link (Au−S−wire−CHO) and, in relation to the former, highlights the significance of the second substituent. Amines compete with thiols for self-assembly on gold and may even bond via deprotonated nitrogen. For instance, 4-{(E)-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzimidazol-2-thione-5-yl)imino]methyl}benzaldehyde (3) binds via a nitrogen of the imidazole ring and the self-assembled monolayer (SAM) exhibits a 2.2 eV shift of the N 1s binding energy (SAM, 398.3 eV; solid sample, 400.5 eV) compared with a 1.0 eV shift for 1. Its in situ formed molecular wires with one to five bridged anthraquinone units exhibit symmetrical current−voltage characteristics, but the behavior alters to rectifying when the electron-accepting sequence is terminated by a 4-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalene donor. Forward bias corresponds to electron flow from cathode to acceptor and from donor to anode, but the electrical asymmetry is dependent upon the number of bridging units. Molecules with two anthraquinones exhibit an optimum rectification ratio of 55 at ±1 V.",
author = "Geoff Ashwell and Williams, {Aled T.} and Barnes, {Susan A.} and Sarah Chappell and Phillips, {Laurie J.} and Benjamin Robinson and Barbara Urasinska-Wojcik and Piotr Wierzchowiec and Gentlee, {Ian R.} and B. Wood",
year = "2011",
month = mar,
day = "17",
doi = "10.1021/jp200006j",
language = "English",
volume = "115",
pages = "4200--4208",
journal = "The Journal of Physical Chemistry C",
issn = "1932-7447",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Self-assembly of amino-thiols via gold-nitrogen links and consequence for in situ elongation of molecular wires on surface-modified electrodes

AU - Ashwell, Geoff

AU - Williams, Aled T.

AU - Barnes, Susan A.

AU - Chappell, Sarah

AU - Phillips, Laurie J.

AU - Robinson, Benjamin

AU - Urasinska-Wojcik, Barbara

AU - Wierzchowiec, Piotr

AU - Gentlee, Ian R.

AU - Wood, B.

PY - 2011/3/17

Y1 - 2011/3/17

N2 - The stepwise synthesis of molecular wires on goldnanoparticles and gold electrodes has been performed using amino-terminated and aldehyde-terminated thiols as anchoring groups to provide surface-active sites for imino coupling. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy provides evidence that 4-mercaptoaniline (1) binds via either substituent, Au−S−C6H4−NH2 (N 1s, 400.1 eV) or Au−N(H2)−C6H4−SH (N 1s, 399.1 eV), therefore depleting the number of reactive amine sites at the surface. In contrast, 4-[(4-mercaptophenylimino)methyl]benzaldehyde (2) binds exclusively via a thiolate link (Au−S−wire−CHO) and, in relation to the former, highlights the significance of the second substituent. Amines compete with thiols for self-assembly on gold and may even bond via deprotonated nitrogen. For instance, 4-{(E)-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzimidazol-2-thione-5-yl)imino]methyl}benzaldehyde (3) binds via a nitrogen of the imidazole ring and the self-assembled monolayer (SAM) exhibits a 2.2 eV shift of the N 1s binding energy (SAM, 398.3 eV; solid sample, 400.5 eV) compared with a 1.0 eV shift for 1. Its in situ formed molecular wires with one to five bridged anthraquinone units exhibit symmetrical current−voltage characteristics, but the behavior alters to rectifying when the electron-accepting sequence is terminated by a 4-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalene donor. Forward bias corresponds to electron flow from cathode to acceptor and from donor to anode, but the electrical asymmetry is dependent upon the number of bridging units. Molecules with two anthraquinones exhibit an optimum rectification ratio of 55 at ±1 V.

AB - The stepwise synthesis of molecular wires on goldnanoparticles and gold electrodes has been performed using amino-terminated and aldehyde-terminated thiols as anchoring groups to provide surface-active sites for imino coupling. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy provides evidence that 4-mercaptoaniline (1) binds via either substituent, Au−S−C6H4−NH2 (N 1s, 400.1 eV) or Au−N(H2)−C6H4−SH (N 1s, 399.1 eV), therefore depleting the number of reactive amine sites at the surface. In contrast, 4-[(4-mercaptophenylimino)methyl]benzaldehyde (2) binds exclusively via a thiolate link (Au−S−wire−CHO) and, in relation to the former, highlights the significance of the second substituent. Amines compete with thiols for self-assembly on gold and may even bond via deprotonated nitrogen. For instance, 4-{(E)-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzimidazol-2-thione-5-yl)imino]methyl}benzaldehyde (3) binds via a nitrogen of the imidazole ring and the self-assembled monolayer (SAM) exhibits a 2.2 eV shift of the N 1s binding energy (SAM, 398.3 eV; solid sample, 400.5 eV) compared with a 1.0 eV shift for 1. Its in situ formed molecular wires with one to five bridged anthraquinone units exhibit symmetrical current−voltage characteristics, but the behavior alters to rectifying when the electron-accepting sequence is terminated by a 4-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalene donor. Forward bias corresponds to electron flow from cathode to acceptor and from donor to anode, but the electrical asymmetry is dependent upon the number of bridging units. Molecules with two anthraquinones exhibit an optimum rectification ratio of 55 at ±1 V.

U2 - 10.1021/jp200006j

DO - 10.1021/jp200006j

M3 - Journal article

VL - 115

SP - 4200

EP - 4208

JO - The Journal of Physical Chemistry C

JF - The Journal of Physical Chemistry C

SN - 1932-7447

IS - 10

ER -