Cargando…

Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks

Three‐dimensional fluorescent graphene frameworks with controlled porous morphologies are of significant importance for practical applications reliant on controlled structural and electronic properties, such as organic electronics and photochemistry. Here we report a synthetically accessible approac...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mao, Boyang, Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando, Ge, Haobo, Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah, Mirabello, Vincenzo, Palomares, Francisco J., Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele, Botchway, Stanley W., Calatayud, David G., Pascu, Sofia I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6892451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31844605
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/open.201900310
_version_ 1783476031269634048
author Mao, Boyang
Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando
Ge, Haobo
Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah
Mirabello, Vincenzo
Palomares, Francisco J.
Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele
Botchway, Stanley W.
Calatayud, David G.
Pascu, Sofia I.
author_facet Mao, Boyang
Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando
Ge, Haobo
Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah
Mirabello, Vincenzo
Palomares, Francisco J.
Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele
Botchway, Stanley W.
Calatayud, David G.
Pascu, Sofia I.
author_sort Mao, Boyang
collection PubMed
description Three‐dimensional fluorescent graphene frameworks with controlled porous morphologies are of significant importance for practical applications reliant on controlled structural and electronic properties, such as organic electronics and photochemistry. Here we report a synthetically accessible approach concerning directed aromatic stacking interactions to give rise to new fluorogenic 3D frameworks with tuneable porosities achieved through molecular variations. The binding interactions between the graphene‐like domains present in the in situ‐formed reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with functional porphyrin molecules lead to new hybrids via an unprecedented solvothermal reaction. Functional free‐base porphyrins featuring perfluorinated aryl groups or hexyl chains at their meso‐ and β‐positions were employed in turn to act as directing entities for the assembly of new graphene‐based and foam‐like frameworks and of their corresponding coronene‐based hybrids. Investigations in the dispersed phase and in thin‐film by XPS, SEM and FLIM shed light onto the nature of the aromatic stacking within functional rGO frameworks (denoted rGOFs) which was then modelled semi‐empirically and by DFT calculations. The pore sizes of the new emerging reduced graphene oxide hybrids are tuneable at the molecular level and mediated by the bonding forces with the functional porphyrins acting as the “molecular glue”. Single crystal X‐ray crystallography described the stacking of a perfluorinated porphyrin with coronene, which can be employed as a molecular model for understanding the local aromatic stacking order and charge transfer interactions within these rGOFs for the first time. This opens up a new route to controllable 3D framework morphologies and pore size from the Ångstrom to the micrometre scale. Theoretical modelling showed that the porosity of these materials is mainly due to the controlled inter‐planar distance between the rGO, coronene or graphene sheets. The host‐guest chemistry involves the porphyrins acting as guests held through π‐π stacking, as demonstrated by XPS. The objective of this study is also to shed light into the fundamental localised electronic and energy transfer properties in these new molecularly engineered porous and fluorogenic architectures, aiming in turn to understand how functional porphyrins may exert stacking control over the notoriously disordered local structure present in porous reduced graphene oxide fragments. By tuning the porosity and the distance between the graphene sheets using aromatic stacking with porphyrins, it is also possible to tune the electronic structure of the final nanohybrid material, as indicated by FLIM experiments on thin films. Such nanohybrids with highly controlled pores dimensions and morphologies open the way to new design and assembly of storage devices and applications incorporating π‐conjugated molecules and materials and their π‐stacks may be relevant towards selective separation membranes, water purification and biosensing applications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6892451
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68924512019-12-16 Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks Mao, Boyang Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando Ge, Haobo Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah Mirabello, Vincenzo Palomares, Francisco J. Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele Botchway, Stanley W. Calatayud, David G. Pascu, Sofia I. ChemistryOpen Full Papers Three‐dimensional fluorescent graphene frameworks with controlled porous morphologies are of significant importance for practical applications reliant on controlled structural and electronic properties, such as organic electronics and photochemistry. Here we report a synthetically accessible approach concerning directed aromatic stacking interactions to give rise to new fluorogenic 3D frameworks with tuneable porosities achieved through molecular variations. The binding interactions between the graphene‐like domains present in the in situ‐formed reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with functional porphyrin molecules lead to new hybrids via an unprecedented solvothermal reaction. Functional free‐base porphyrins featuring perfluorinated aryl groups or hexyl chains at their meso‐ and β‐positions were employed in turn to act as directing entities for the assembly of new graphene‐based and foam‐like frameworks and of their corresponding coronene‐based hybrids. Investigations in the dispersed phase and in thin‐film by XPS, SEM and FLIM shed light onto the nature of the aromatic stacking within functional rGO frameworks (denoted rGOFs) which was then modelled semi‐empirically and by DFT calculations. The pore sizes of the new emerging reduced graphene oxide hybrids are tuneable at the molecular level and mediated by the bonding forces with the functional porphyrins acting as the “molecular glue”. Single crystal X‐ray crystallography described the stacking of a perfluorinated porphyrin with coronene, which can be employed as a molecular model for understanding the local aromatic stacking order and charge transfer interactions within these rGOFs for the first time. This opens up a new route to controllable 3D framework morphologies and pore size from the Ångstrom to the micrometre scale. Theoretical modelling showed that the porosity of these materials is mainly due to the controlled inter‐planar distance between the rGO, coronene or graphene sheets. The host‐guest chemistry involves the porphyrins acting as guests held through π‐π stacking, as demonstrated by XPS. The objective of this study is also to shed light into the fundamental localised electronic and energy transfer properties in these new molecularly engineered porous and fluorogenic architectures, aiming in turn to understand how functional porphyrins may exert stacking control over the notoriously disordered local structure present in porous reduced graphene oxide fragments. By tuning the porosity and the distance between the graphene sheets using aromatic stacking with porphyrins, it is also possible to tune the electronic structure of the final nanohybrid material, as indicated by FLIM experiments on thin films. Such nanohybrids with highly controlled pores dimensions and morphologies open the way to new design and assembly of storage devices and applications incorporating π‐conjugated molecules and materials and their π‐stacks may be relevant towards selective separation membranes, water purification and biosensing applications. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6892451/ /pubmed/31844605 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/open.201900310 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Full Papers
Mao, Boyang
Cortezon‐Tamarit, Fernando
Ge, Haobo
Kuganathan, Navaratnarajah
Mirabello, Vincenzo
Palomares, Francisco J.
Kociok‐Köhn, Gabriele
Botchway, Stanley W.
Calatayud, David G.
Pascu, Sofia I.
Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title_full Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title_fullStr Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title_full_unstemmed Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title_short Directed Molecular Stacking for Engineered Fluorescent Three‐Dimensional Reduced Graphene Oxide and Coronene Frameworks
title_sort directed molecular stacking for engineered fluorescent three‐dimensional reduced graphene oxide and coronene frameworks
topic Full Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6892451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31844605
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/open.201900310
work_keys_str_mv AT maoboyang directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT cortezontamaritfernando directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT gehaobo directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT kuganathannavaratnarajah directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT mirabellovincenzo directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT palomaresfranciscoj directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT kociokkohngabriele directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT botchwaystanleyw directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT calatayuddavidg directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks
AT pascusofiai directedmolecularstackingforengineeredfluorescentthreedimensionalreducedgrapheneoxideandcoroneneframeworks