Molecules in an egg carton: How water surfaces can be used to produce functional materials

(Nanowerk News) The production of high-quality monolayers – i.e. only one molecule high - is highly relevant for optoelectronic components such as organic light-emitting diodes used today in modern cell phones: Both lifetime and energy efficiency can be increased.
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, through a collaboration with TU Dresden, have now used lasers to investigate how water surfaces can be used as a template for the regular arrangement of molecules and what physicochemical mechanisms underlie this (Chem, "Surfactant monolayer-assisted growth of a crystalline quasi-2D polymer").
whole eggs in water illustration
A team at the MPI for Polymer Research has investigated how molecules can arrange themselves under the control of a water surface. (Image: MPI for Polymer Research)
Organic light-emitting diodes consist of many thin layers, some of which are only one molecule thick. “On-water chemistry" - the use of water surfaces to influence chemical reactions - discovered back in the 1980s, is a promising candidate for producing such layers. Like an egg carton, this type of chemistry offers the possibility of selectively forcing molecules into a crystalline - i.e., regularly arranged - structure: They can only sit where the surfactants on the water surface allow them to.
Until now, it was unclear what physical and chemical processes are operative to achieve this arrangement. For example, what role does the charge of the surfactant play? To what extent do bond distances on the water surface have to match those of the applied molecule?
Yuki Nagata, group leader in Mischa Bonn's department at the MPI for Polymer Research, and his team have addressed these questions. For this purpose, they used the molecule "polyaniline" as an experimental object and investigated the process of arrangement on the water surface in more detail using laser spectroscopy.
Sum-frequency generation spectroscopy (SFG) is ideally suited for this purpose, as it only provides signals from the interface and not from the underlying water. With its help, the team was able to map the polymerization process over a period of several hours and also detect any intermediates that were formed.
"We were able to show that the charge on the surface matters for the quality of the synthesized samples," Nagata said. "We hope that our research will provide the way to produce tailored polymeric coatings by tailoring the water surfaces accordingly."
Source: Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
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