Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature

Moldt T, Brete D, Przyrembel D, Das S, Goldman JR, Kundu PK, Gahl C, Klajn R, Weinelt M. 2015. Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature. Langmuir. 31(3), 1048–1057.

Download
No fulltext has been uploaded. References only!

Journal Article | Published | English

Scopus indexed
Author
Moldt, Thomas; Brete, Daniel; Przyrembel, Daniel; Das, Sanjib; Goldman, Joel R.; Kundu, Pintu K.; Gahl, Cornelius; Klajn, RafalISTA; Weinelt, Martin
Abstract
Photoswitching in densely packed azobenzene self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) is strongly affected by steric constraints and excitonic coupling between neighboring chromophores. Therefore, control of the chromophore density is essential for enhancing and manipulating the photoisomerization yield. We systematically compare two methods to achieve this goal: First, we assemble monocomponent azobenzene–alkanethiolate SAMs on gold nanoparticles of varying size. Second, we form mixed SAMs of azobenzene–alkanethiolates and “dummy” alkanethiolates on planar substrates. Both methods lead to a gradual decrease of the chromophore density and enable efficient photoswitching with low-power light sources. X-ray spectroscopy reveals that coadsorption from solution yields mixtures with tunable composition. The orientation of the chromophores with respect to the surface normal changes from a tilted to an upright position with increasing azobenzene density. For both systems, optical spectroscopy reveals a pronounced excitonic shift that increases with the chromophore density. In spite of exciting the optical transition of the monomer, the main spectral change in mixed SAMs occurs in the excitonic band. In addition, the photoisomerization yield decreases only slightly by increasing the azobenzene–alkanethiolate density, and we observed photoswitching even with minor dilutions. Unlike in solution, azobenzene in the planar SAM can be switched back almost completely by optical excitation from the cis to the original trans state within a short time scale. These observations indicate cooperativity in the photoswitching process of mixed SAMs.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2015-01-27
Journal Title
Langmuir
Volume
31
Issue
3
Page
1048-1057
ISSN
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Moldt T, Brete D, Przyrembel D, et al. Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature. Langmuir. 2015;31(3):1048-1057. doi:10.1021/la504291n
Moldt, T., Brete, D., Przyrembel, D., Das, S., Goldman, J. R., Kundu, P. K., … Weinelt, M. (2015). Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature. Langmuir. American Chemical Society. https://doi.org/10.1021/la504291n
Moldt, Thomas, Daniel Brete, Daniel Przyrembel, Sanjib Das, Joel R. Goldman, Pintu K. Kundu, Cornelius Gahl, Rafal Klajn, and Martin Weinelt. “Tailoring the Properties of Surface-Immobilized Azobenzenes by Monolayer Dilution and Surface Curvature.” Langmuir. American Chemical Society, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1021/la504291n.
T. Moldt et al., “Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature,” Langmuir, vol. 31, no. 3. American Chemical Society, pp. 1048–1057, 2015.
Moldt T, Brete D, Przyrembel D, Das S, Goldman JR, Kundu PK, Gahl C, Klajn R, Weinelt M. 2015. Tailoring the properties of surface-immobilized azobenzenes by monolayer dilution and surface curvature. Langmuir. 31(3), 1048–1057.
Moldt, Thomas, et al. “Tailoring the Properties of Surface-Immobilized Azobenzenes by Monolayer Dilution and Surface Curvature.” Langmuir, vol. 31, no. 3, American Chemical Society, 2015, pp. 1048–57, doi:10.1021/la504291n.

Export

Marked Publications

Open Data ISTA Research Explorer

Sources

PMID: 25544061
PubMed | Europe PMC

Search this title in

Google Scholar