Semiconducting Single Crystals Comprising Segregated Arrays of Complexes of C60
Author(s) -
Jonathan C. Barnes,
Edward J. Dale,
Aleksandrs Prokofjevs,
Ashwin Narayanan,
Ian C. Gibbs-Hall,
Michal Jurı́ček,
Charlotte L. Stern,
Amy A. Sarjeant,
Youssry Y. Botros,
Samuel I. Stupp,
J. Fraser Stoddart
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja512959g
Subject(s) - chemistry , conductance , fullerene , molecule , stack (abstract data type) , conductivity , crystallography , non covalent interactions , viologen , electrical resistivity and conductivity , self assembly , solid state , oxygen , nanotechnology , chemical physics , photochemistry , organic chemistry , hydrogen bond , materials science , mathematics , combinatorics , computer science , programming language , electrical engineering , engineering
Although pristine C60 prefers to adopt a face-centered cubic packing arrangement in the solid state, it has been demonstrated that noncovalent-bonding interactions with a variety of molecular receptors lead to the complexation of C60 molecules, albeit usually with little or no control over their long-range order. Herein, an extended viologen-based cyclophane—ExBox2(4+)—has been employed as a molecular receptor which, not only binds C60 one-on-one, but also results in the columnar self-assembly of the 1:1 inclusion complexes under ambient conditions. These one-dimensional arrays of fullerenes stack along the long axis of needle-like single crystals as a consequence of multiple noncovalent-bonding interactions between each of the inclusion complexes. The electrical conductivity of these crystals is on the order of 10(-7) S cm(-1), even without any evacuation of oxygen, and matches the conductivity of high-quality, unfunctionalized C60-based materials that typically require stringent high-temperature vaporization techniques, along with the careful removal of oxygen and moisture, prior to measuring their conductance.
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