Farha and colleagues have developed a strategy for expanding the pore apertures of csq-net Zr-based MOFs to obtain an isoreticular series of MOF structures with pore apertures ranging from 3.3 to 6.7 nm. Enzymes immobilized in the MOF are accessible to coenzymes and show higher activity than that of the free enzymes.
We demonstrate a new method of achieving rectification in single molecule devices using the high-bias properties of gold-carbon bonds. Our design for molecular rectifiers uses a symmetric, conjugated molecular backbone with a single methylsulfide group linking one end to a gold electrode and a covalent gold-carbon bond at the other end. The gold-carbon bond results in a hybrid gold-molecule "gateway" state pinned close to the Fermi level of one electrode. Through nonequilibrium transport calculations, we show that the energy of this state shifts drastically with applied bias, resulting in rectification at surprisingly low voltages. We use this concept to design and synthesize a family of diodes and demonstrate through single-molecule current-voltage measurements that the rectification ratio can be predictably and efficiently tuned. This result constitutes the first experimental demonstration of a rationally tunable system of single-molecule rectifiers. More generally, the results demonstrate that the high-bias properties of "gateway" states can be used to provide additional functionality to molecular electronic systems.
We modulate the conductance of electrochemically inactive molecules in single-molecule junctions using an electrolytic gate to controllably tune the energy level alignment of the system. Molecular junctions that conduct through their highest occupied molecular orbital show a decrease in conductance when applying a positive electrochemical potential, and those that conduct though their lowest unoccupied molecular orbital show the opposite trend. We fit the experimentally measured conductance data as a function of gate voltage with a Lorentzian function and find the fitting parameters to be in quantitative agreement with self-energy corrected density functional theory calculations of transmission probability across single-molecule junctions. This work shows that electrochemical gating can directly modulate the alignment of the conducting orbital relative to the metal Fermi energy, thereby changing the junction transport properties.
We describe the incorporation of a bistable mechanically interlocked molecule (MIM) into a robust Zr-based metal-organic framework (MOF), NU-1000, by employing a post-synthetic functionalization protocol. On average, close to two bistable [2]catenanes can be incorporated per repeating unit of the hexagonal channels of NU-1000. The reversible redox-switching of the bistable [2]catenanes is retained inside the MOF, as evidenced by solid-state UV-vis-NIR reflectance spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry. This research demonstrates that bistable MIMs are capable of exhibiting robust dynamics inside the nanopores of a MOF.
Responding to treatment: A superamphiphile is formed between a double‐hydrophilic polymer (methoxy‐poly(ethylene glycol)‐block‐poly(L‐lysine hydrochloride)) and a natural enzyme‐responsive molecule (adenosine 5′‐triphosphate). The superamphiphile self‐assembles into spherical aggregates, which, upon addition of enzymes, disassemble and release loaded molecules (see picture).
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