Fabrication of Supramolecular n/p-Nanowires via Coassembly of Oppositely Charged Peptide-Chromophore Systems in Aqueous Media
Journal article, 2017

Fabrication of supramolecular electroactive materials at the nanoscale with well-defined size, shape, composition, and organization in aqueous medium is a current challenge. Herein we report construction of supramolecular charge-transfer complex one-dimensional (1D) nanowires consisting of highly ordered mixed-stack pi-electron donor-acceptor (D-A) domains. We synthesized n-type and p-type beta-sheet forming short peptide-chromophore conjugates, which assemble separately into well-ordered nanofibers in aqueous media. These complementary p-type and n-type nanofibers coassemble via hydrogen bonding, charge-transfer complex, and electrostatic interactions to generate highly uniform supramolecular n/p-coassembled 1D nanowires. This molecular design ensures highly ordered arrangement of D-A stacks within n/p-coassembled supramolecular nanowires. The supramolecular n/p-coassembled nanowires were found to be formed by A D-A unit cells having an association constant (K-A) of 5.18 x 10(5) M-1. In addition, electrical measurements revealed that supramolecular n/p-coassembled nanowires are approximately 2400 and 10 times more conductive than individual n-type and p-type nanofibers, respectively. This facile strategy allows fabrication of well-defined supramolecular electroactive nanomaterials in aqueous media, which can find a variety of applications in optoelectronics, photovoltaics, organic chromophore arrays, and bioelectronics.

coassembly

self-assembly

peptide chromophore

conductivity

nanowires

supramolecular

Author

M. A. Khalily

Bilkent University

G. Bakan

Atilim University

Bilkent University

Betül Kücüköz

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

A. E. Topal

Bilkent University

A. Karatay

Ankara Universitesi

H. G. Yaglioglu

Ankara Universitesi

A. Dana

Bilkent University

M. O. Guler

University of Chicago

Bilkent University

ACS Nano

1936-0851 (ISSN) 1936-086X (eISSN)

Vol. 11 7 6881-6892

Subject Categories

Physical Chemistry

Nano Technology

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1021/acsnano.7b02025

More information

Latest update

4/6/2022 1