The availability of helical assemblies of plasmonic nanoparticles with precisely controlled and tunable structures can play a key role in the future development of chiral plasmonics and metamaterials. Here, a strategy to efficiently yield helical structures based on the cooperative interactions of liquid crystals and gold nanoparticles in thin films is developed. These nanocomposites exhibit exceptional long‐range hierarchical order across length scales, which results from the growth mechanism of nanoparticle‐coated twisted nanoribbons and their ability to form organized bundles. The helical assembly formation is governed by the presence of rationally functionalized nanoparticles. Importantly, the thickness of the achieved nanocomposites can be reversibly reconfigured owing to the polymorphic nature of the liquid crystal. The versatility of the proposed approach is demonstrated by preparing helices assembled from nanoparticles of different geometries and dimensions (spherical and rod‐like). The described strategy may become an enabling technology for structuring nanoparticle assemblies with high precision and fabricating optically active materials.
Mirror
symmetry breaking in materials is a fascinating phenomenon
that has practical implications for various optoelectronic technologies.
Chiral plasmonic materials are particularly appealing due to their
strong and specific interactions with light. In this work we broaden
the portfolio of available strategies toward the preparation of chiral
plasmonic assemblies, by applying the principles of chirality synchronization—a
phenomenon known for small molecules, which results in the formation
of chiral domains from transiently chiral molecules. We report the
controlled cocrystallization of 23 nm gold nanoparticles and liquid
crystal molecules yielding domains made of highly ordered, helical
nanofibers, preferentially twisted to the right or to the left within
each domain. We confirmed that such micrometer sized domains exhibit
strong, far-field circular dichroism (CD) signals, even though the
bulk material is racemic. We further highlight the potential of the
proposed approach to realize chiral plasmonic thin films by using
a mechanical chirality discrimination method. Toward this end, we
developed a rapid CD imaging technique based on the use of polarized
light optical microscopy (POM), which enabled probing the CD signal
with micrometer-scale resolution, despite of linear dichroism and
birefringence in the sample. The developed methodology allows us to
extend intrinsically local effects of chiral synchronization to the
macroscopic scale, thereby broadening the available tools for chirality
manipulation in chiral plasmonic systems.
Composite structures exhibiting a periodic arrangement of building blocks can be found in natural systems at different length scales. Recreating such systems in artificial composites using the principles of self-assembly has been a great challenge, especially for 1D microscale systems. Here, we present a purposely designed composite material consisting of gold nanoparticles and a nematic liquid crystal matrix that has the ability to self-create a periodic structure in the form of a one-dimensional photonic lattice through a phase separation process occurring in a confined space. Our strategy is based on the use of a thermoswitchable medium that reversibly and quickly responds to both heating and cooling. We find that the period of the structure is strongly related to the size of the confining space. We believe that our findings will allow us to not only better understand the phase separation process in multicomponent soft/colloid mixtures with useful optical properties but also improve our understanding of the precise assembly of advanced materials into one-dimensional periodic systems, with prospective applications in future photonic technologies.
A series of optically pure (R)- and (S)-1,3,4,12a-tetrahydropyrazino[2,1-c][1,4]benzodiazepine-6,12(2H,11H)-dione derivatives was designed and synthesized as novel anthramycin analogues in a three-step, one-pot procedure, and tested for their antiproliferative activity on nine following cell lines: MV-4-11, UMUC-3, MDA-MB-231, MCF7, LoVo, HT-29, A-549, A2780 and BALB/3T3. The key structural features responsible for exhibition of cytotoxic effect were determined: the (S)-configuration of chiral center and the presence of hydrophobic 4-biphenyl substituent in the side chain. Introduction of bromine atom into the 8 position (8g) or substitution of dilactam ring with benzyl group (8m) further improved the activity and selectivity of investigated compounds. Among others, compound 8g exhibited selective cytotoxic effect against MV-4-11 (IC = 8.7 μM) and HT-29 (IC = 17.8 μM) cell lines, while 8m showed noticeable anticancer activity against MV-4-11 (IC = 10.8 μM) and LoVo (IC = 11.0 μM) cell lines. The cell cycle arrest in G/S checkpoint and apoptosis associated with overproduction of reactive oxygen species was also observed for 8e and 8m.
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