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Divalent Multilinking Bonds Control Growth and Morphology of Nanopolymers
Author(s) -
Yan Xiong,
Zhiwei Lin,
Deniz Mostarac,
Brian Minevich,
Qiuyuan Peng,
Guolong Zhu,
Pedro A. Sánchez,
Sofia S. Kantorovich,
Yonggang Ke,
Oleg Gang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c03009
Subject(s) - divalent , chemical physics , molecular dynamics , valence (chemistry) , nanoscopic scale , valence bond theory , nanotechnology , chemistry , materials science , crystallography , molecule , computational chemistry , molecular orbital , organic chemistry
Assembly of nanoscale objects into linear architectures resembling molecular polymers is a basic organization resulting from divalent interactions. Such linear architectures occur for particles with two binding patches on opposite sides, known as Janus particles. However, unlike molecular systems where valence bonds can be envisioned as pointlike interactions nanoscale patches are often realized through multiple molecular linkages. The relationship between the characteristics of these linkages, the resulting interpatch connectivity, and assembly morphology is not well-explored. Here, we investigate assembly behavior of model divalent nanomonomers, DNA nanocuboid with tailorable multilinking bonds. Our study reveals that the characteristics of individual molecular linkages and their collective properties have a profound effect on nanomonomer reactivity and resulting morphologies. Beyond linear nanopolymers, a common signature of divalent nanomonomers, we observe an effective valence increase as linkages lengthened, leading to the nanopolymer bundling. The experimental findings are rationalized by molecular dynamics simulations.

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