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1.
Systems consisting of an amphiphilic melamine-type monolayer and a pyrimidine derivative dissolved in the aqueous subphase are good candidates for the formation of interfacial supramolecular assemblies by molecular recognition of hydrogen-bond nonsurface-active species. In the present work, the change in the thermodynamic, phase, and structural properties as a result of molecular recognition of dissolved thymine by 2,4-di(n-undecylamino)-6-amino-1,3,5-triazine (2 C11H23-melamine) monolayers is studied. The combination of surface pressure studies with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) imaging and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements is optimal for the characterization of the change in structure and phase behavior at the interfacial recognition process. The molecular recognition of the nonsurface-active thymine dissolved in aqueous subphase changes drastically the characteristic features (surface pressure-area isotherms, morphology of the condensed phase domains) of the 2 C11H23-melamine monolayer. It is demonstrated that the kinetics of the recognition process affect largely the main characteristics (phase behavior, morphology of the condensed phase domains) of the interfacial system. The monolayers of 2 C11H23-melamine-thymine assemblies form dumbbell-shaped condensed phase domains not yet observed in other Langmuir monolayers so far. GIXD results show that the molecular recognition of thymine causes only quantitative changes in the two-dimensional lattice structure. Complementary hydrogen bonding of two thymine molecules by one 2 C11H23-melamine molecule is concluded from the chemical structure of both components. Additional information about the nature of the hydrogen bonding on the basis of supramolecular assemblies is obtained by using the quantum chemical PM3 approximation. Energy and lengths of the hydrogen bonds of the optimized thymine-2 C11H23-melamine-thymine structure are calculated.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The main characteristics of Langmuir monolayers are radically changed by molecular recognition of hydrogen bond nonsurface-active species. The change in the thermodynamic, phase, and structural features by molecular recognition of dissolved uracil or barbituric acid by 2,4-di(n-undecylamino)-6-amino-1,3,5-triazine (2C11H23-melamine) monolayers is characterized by combination of surface pressure studies with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) imaging and Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements. Phase behavior of the 2C11H23-melamine monolayer and morphology of the condensed phase domains are changed drastically, but in a specific way, by molecular recognition of uracil or barbituric acid. The main characteristics of the interfacial system can be essentially affected by the kinetics of the recognition process. Pure 2C11H23-melamine monolayers show only small compact, but nontextured domains. The monolayers of 2C11H23-melamine-uracil assemblies develop well-shaped circular condensed-phase domains having an inner texture with alkyl chains essentially oriented parallel to the periphery and having a striking tendency to two-dimensional (2D) Ostwald ripening. The 2C11H23-melamine-barbituric acid monolayers form large homogeneous areas of condensed phase that transfer at smaller areas per molecule to a homogeneous condensed monolayer. BAM imaging of corresponding assemblies with ((CH3(CH2)11O(CH2)3)2-melamine having modified alkyl chains demonstrates the specific effect of the monolayer component. GIXD results reveal that molecular recognition of pyrimidine derivatives gives rise only to quantitative changes in the two-dimensional lattice structure. The striking differences in the main characteristics between the supramolecular species are related to their different chemical structures. Quantum chemical calculations using the semiempirical PM3 method provide information about the different nature of the hydrogen-bonding-based supramolecular structures.  相似文献   

4.
Progress in the understanding of interfacial molecular recognition kinetics is obtained by use of the sweeping technique for experimental studies of the reaction kinetics between a host monolayer and a non-surface-active species dissolved in the aqueous subphase. The experimental results show that the interfacial recognition reaction between a 2C(11)H(23)-melamine (2,4-di(n-undecylamino)-6-amino-1,3,5-triazine) monolayer and dissolved barbituric acid is reversible when the 2C(11)H(23)-melamine/barbituric acid monolayer is transferred back onto a pure water subphase. The kinetics of the recognition and dissociation reaction is experimentally and theoretically investigated. The approximate additive theoretical model developed recently is extended to consider the dissociation kinetics of the interfacial supramolecular complex. The kinetic constants for the recognition and dissociation reactions in the mixed monolayer consisting of 2C(11)H(23)-melamine and 2C(11)H(23)-melamine/barbituric acid complex are determined. It is shown that the kinetic constant of the recognition reaction is nearly independent of temperature, whereas that of the dissociation reaction increases with increasing temperature.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Monolayers of amphiphilic melamine derivatives are good candidates for the formation of supramolecular structures by hydrogen-bonding of nonsurface active species dissolved in the aqueous subphase by molecular recognition. In the present work, the thermodynamic and structural properties of the Langmuir monolayers of a homologous series of a selected amphiphilic melamine-type are characterized. Good candidates for such studies are the decyl, undecyl, and dodecyl homologues of the 2,4-di(n-alkylamino)-6-amino-1,3,5-triazine (2CnH(2n+1)-melamine) monolayers because of their two-phase coexistence region in the accessible temperature range. The characterization of the structural and phase behavior is performed by a combination of surface pressure studies with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) imaging and Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements. A comprehensive thermodynamic analysis provides good agreement between the experimental surface pressure - area (Pi-A) isotherms and the theoretical curves that were calculated on the basis of equations of state for a large region of monolayer stages developed by us in J. Phys. Chem. 1999, 103, 145. Theoretical curves calculated by application of equations of state only for the fluid monolayer state proposed recently by Rusanov (J. Chem Phys. 2004, 120, 10736) are in good agreement with the experiments in a limited temperature range. A rigorous equation is derived and applied to the experimental results for the calculation of the enthalpy of two-dimensional phase transition. The combination of BAM and GIXD illustrates that the microscopic long range ordering of the condensed monolayer phases is related to the lattice structure of the condensed monolayer.  相似文献   

7.
A twin-tailed, twin-chiral fatty acid, (2R,3R)-(+)-bis(decyloxy)succinic acid was synthesized and its two dimensional behavior at the air-water interface was examined. The pH of the subphase had a profound effect on the monolayer formation. On acidic subphase, stable monolayers with increased area per molecule due to hydrogen bonding and bilayers at collapse pressures were observed. Highly compressible films were formed at 40 degrees C, while stable monolayers with increased area were observed at sub-room temperatures. Langmuir monolayers formed on subphases containing 1 mM ZnCl2 and CaCl2 revealed two dimensional metal complex formation with Zn2+ forming a chelate-type complex, while Ca2+ formed an ionic-type complex. Monolayers transferred from the condensed phase onto hydrophilic Si(100) and quartz substrates revealed the formation of bilayers through transfer-induced monolayer buckling. Compression induced crystallites in 2D from monolayers and vesicle-like supramolecular structures from multilayers were the noted LB film characteristics, adopting optical imaging and electron microscopy. The interfacial monolayer structure studied through molecular dynamics simulation revealed the order and packing at a molecular level; monolayers adsorbed at various simulated specific areas of the molecule corroborated the (pi-A) isotherm and the formation of a hexagonal lattice at the air-water interface.  相似文献   

8.
Complex monolayers of barbituric acid and melamine were formed by spreading a chloroform solution of amphiphilic barbituric acid on the subphase of melamine solution. It was confirmed that the complex monolayer was formed through in situ complementary hydrogen bonding at the air-water interface. It was interesting to find that the complex LB films showed supramolecular chirality although both of the molecules were achiral, as verified by the circular dichroism spectral measurements. It was suggested that the pi-pi stacking of the neighboring barbituric acid and melamine group in a helical sense resulted in the chirality of the molecular assemblies. Due to the directionality of the hydrogen bonding, the BA-M film could form regular aligned nanofibers on the AFM images. Increasing the subphase temperature will lead to the decrease of CD intensity and the change of the morphologies. We suggested that the strength of the hydrogen bonding resulted in the difference.  相似文献   

9.
Self-assembly and molecular recognition of the monolayers composed of an equimolar mixture of adenine- and thymine-functionalized nucleolipids at the air-water interface have been investigated in detail using surface pressure-molecular area isotherms and in situ infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS). Prior to molecular recognition, the adenine moieties in the monolayer were almost oriented on an end-on mode through π-stacking and hydrogen bonding interactions, and the C-C-C planes of the alkyl chains were preferentially oriented perpendicular to the water surface, while the thymine moieties in the monolayer were involved in hydrogen bonding almost with a flat-on orientation. On aqueous subphases containing complementary bases, no significant molecular recognition was observed for the monolayers of individual nucleolipids. In the monolayer of equimolar mixture, molecular recognition occurred between the adenine and thymine moieties through hydrogen bonding probably with the development of cyclic structures of adenine-thymine-adenine-thymine quartets. Although molecular recognition between the monolayer of thymine-functionalized nucleolipids and aqueous melamine took place through triple hydrogen bonds, no melamine binding to the monolayer of equimolar mixture was observed, which reflects the formation of the quartets in the mixed monolayers at the air-water interface. FTIR and small-angle X-ray diffraction (XRD) results of the corresponding Langmuir-Blodgett films support the hydrogen bonding recognition and molecular orientation.  相似文献   

10.
The use of new sophisticated and highly surface sensitive techniques as synchrotron based X-ray scattering techniques and in-house infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) has revolutionized the monolayer research. Not only the determination of monolayer structures but also interactions between amphiphilic monolayers at the soft air/liquid interface and molecules dissolved in the subphase are important for many areas in material and life sciences. Monolayers are convenient quasi-two-dimensional model systems. This review focuses on interactions between amphiphilic molecules in binary and ternary mixtures as well as on interfacial interactions with interesting biomolecules dissolved in the subphase. The phase state of monolayers can be easily triggered at constant temperature by increasing the packing density of the lipids by compression. Simultaneously the monolayer structure changes are followed in situ by grazing incidence X-ray diffraction or IRRAS. The interactions can be indirectly determined by the observed structure changes. Additionally, the yield of enzymatic reaction can be quantitatively determined, secondary structures of peptides and proteins can be measured and compared with those observed in bulk. In this way, the influence of a confinement on the structural properties of biomolecules can be determined. The adsorption of DNA can be quantified as well as the competing adsorption of ions at charged interfaces. The influence of modified nanoparticles on model membranes can be clearly determined. In this review, the relevance and utility of Langmuir monolayers as suitable models to study physical and chemical interactions at membrane surfaces are clearly demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions of mixed monolayers of two lipids, zwitterionic 1,2-dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and positively charged 1,2-dipalmitoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DPTAP), with phytohormone indolilo-3-acetic acid (IAA) and selenate anions in the aqueous subphase were studied. For this purpose, isotherms of the surface pressure versus the mean molecular area were recorded. Domain formation was investigated by using Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). The method of grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) was also applied for the characterization of the organization of lipid molecules in condensed monolayers. It was found that selenate ions contribute to monolayer condensation by neutralizing the positive net charge of mixed monolayers whereas IAA molecules penetrated the lipid monolayer, causing its expansion/fluidization. When both solutes were introduced into the subphase, a competition between them for interaction with the positively charged lipids in the monolayer was observed.  相似文献   

12.
This report describes the syntheses of rationally designed non-sugar nucleoside as prolamide nucleosides which contain prolyl ring and pyrimidine nucleobases (uracil/thymine) via acetamide bonds. These nucleosides have propensity to form distinctive self-assembly supramolecular helical structures ubiquitously through Watson-Crick/reverse type of hydrogen bonding with nucleobases. Moreover, the prolyl acetamide backbone groups- carbonyl (-C = O) and hydroxyl (-OH) group, are also involved in strengthening of self-assembled helical structures. Importantly, both prolamide thymidine and prolamide uridine have shown two distinctive helical structural patterns, in spite of containing the same backbone. Hence thymine and uracil moieties of prolamide nucleosides are responsible for unique supramolecular helical structural architectures.  相似文献   

13.
Knowledge of the mesoscopic morphology of condensed phase domains formed after the main phase transition in the two-phase coexistence region of Langmuir monolayers progressed rapidly with the development of the highly-sensitive imaging techniques, particularly by Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). Latest developments of commercial BAM instruments have been developed to a high technical level and allow upgrading to imaging ellipsometers which combine optical microscopy and ellipsometry and make the assessment of small layered structures or patterned thin films possible. A large variety of condensed phase domains different in mesoscopic sizes and shapes as well as their textural features has been observed which depend sensitively on the chemical structure of the amphiphilic monolayer and the system conditions, such as surface pressure and temperature. This unsuspected morphological variety of condensed phase domains has been proven not only in Langmuir monolayers but also in adsorbed monolayers (Gibbs monolayers), in Langmuir monolayers penetrated by dissolved surfactants or in adequate molecular recognition systems. The inner textures of domains can be explained on the basis of their geometry and the two-dimensional lattice in dependence of the tilt angle of the alkyl chains and gave rise to the development of a geometric concept on the basis of the molecular packing. New knowledge has been gained about non-equilibrium structures and their transition kinetics into the equilibrium state. Combined results obtained recently by BAM have enhanced the understanding of molecular organization in phase diagrams and binary mixtures. Recent advances in model studies about chiral discrimination effects and of the highly specific structural changes of host-monolayers by recognition of non-surface active guest-components have made progress. Semi-empirical quantum chemical methods have been used to gain insight into the role of different types of interactions involved in the main characteristics of mesoscopic length scale aggregates of mimetic systems.  相似文献   

14.
The N- and/or O-acylation of amphiphilic ethanolamine attracts particular attention because of its interesting biological, pharmaceutical, and medicinal properties. Tetradecanoic acid-2-[(1-oxotetradecyl)amino]ethyl ester (TAOAE) as the selected N,O-diacyl derivative of ethanolamine has been synthesized in order to obtain first information about its main interfacial characteristics, such as the surface pressure-area (π-A) isotherms, the morphology of the condensed phase domains, the lattice structure of the condensed phase, and information about the existence of interfacial hydrogen bonds (-NH···O═C-). The π-A isotherms of TAOAE, similar to those of the most usual monolayers of amphiphiles, show a sharp break point (A(c)) indicating the first-order phase transition from the fluid (liquid-expanded (LE), gaseous (G)) to the condensed (liquid-condensed (LC)) phase. On the mesoscopic scale, the dendritic domains homogeneously reflecting suggest an orientation of the alkyl chains perpendicular to the aqueous surface. The grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) studies reveal hexagonal packing of the TAOAE molecules oriented perpendicular to the surface in an LS phase. The existence of a hydrogen-bonding network in the monolayer is supported by infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) experiments.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Chiral amphiphilic C-undecylcalix[4]resorcinarenes substituted with phenylethyl group or L(-)nore-phedrine were found to form well-organized mono-layers at the aqueous solution-air interface. The substituents, L(-)norephedrine and phenylethyl group, determined the area occupied by the molecule on the water subphase. Introduction of these substituents lead also to perpendicular dipole moments of the molecules in the monolayers ca. 6 times larger than those of the parent amphiphilic calixresorcinarene, CAL11. Interactions of the compounds with K+ were detected by the increase of the surface potential values measured at maximum packing of the monolayer. Addition of amino acids to the subphase lead to conformational changes in the monolayers evidenced by increased surface mean molecular area of the unmodified C-undecyl-calix[4]resorcinarene. These changes were explained by the formation of hydrogen bonds with the amino acids at the expense of hydrogen bonding between the calixarene molecules in the monolayer. In contrast to unsubstituted calixresorcinarenes, interactions of the L(-)norephedrine-and phenylethyl-substituted molecules with amino acids could be easily recognized by the decrease of surface potential and dipole moment in monolayers formed by these calixarenes on subphases containing amino acids. A significant drop in the surface potential and an increased area per molecule demonstrated more specific interactions with selected amino acids: L(-)norephedrine-substituted calixarene interacted with D-valine and the phenylethyl-substituted, with D-tryptophan.  相似文献   

16.
Two symmetric ditopic supramolecular templates (1 and 2) each presenting two hydrogen bonding recognition subunits were synthesized. Each such subunit comprises the same donor and acceptor pattern, capable of binding a substrate molecule with complementary hydrogen bonding groups to form a supramolecular complex. Substrate molecules, such as thymine or uracil derivatives, yield 2 : 1 complexes with the acceptors involving two hydrogen bonds to each subunit with ideal orientation for subsequent [2 + 2] dimerization upon photoirradiation. Selective syn photoproduct formation and concomitant suppression of the trans isomer are favored by orientation of the two guest nucleobases within the template cleft. Complementary donor and acceptor hydrogen bonding induced positioning of the two substrates and steric hindrance within the template clefts are responsible for the selective product formation.  相似文献   

17.
The surface pressure-area diagrams of double-chain fluorocarbon amphiphiles with different headgroup compositions show that the amphiphiles arrange almost perpendicularly to the water subphase and the structure of headgroups exerts significant influence on the amphiphile packing. Strong hydrogen bonding and weak electrostatic interaction favor the formation of stable monolayers. Perfluorooctanoic acid (FOA) cannot form monolayer at water/air interface and can only form liquid monolayer in subphase of calcium nitrate solution. Complete phase separation of palmitic acid and a fluorocarbon amphiphile with shorter hydrocarbon spacer group, 1, could be demonstrated in monolayers by using the phase rule of Crisp. The creation of phase-separated monolayers is possible when the monolayer is composed of a mixture of palmitic acid and a fluorocarbon amphiphile with longer hydrocarbon spacer group, 2. It can be suggested that the miscibility of hydrocarbon amphiphiles with fluorocarbon amphiphiles is determined by the hydrocarbon fraction of fluorocarbon amphiphiles.  相似文献   

18.
Crystalline ternary inclusion monolayers consisting of a two-dimensional hydrogen-bonded host network of guanidinium (G) ions and organosulfonate (S) amphiphiles, and biphenylalkane guests, can be generated at the air-water interface through synergistic structural enforcement by hydrogen bonding and host-guest packing. Surface pressure-area isotherms of the 4'-hexadecylbiphenyl-4-sulfonate (C16BPS) amphiphile in the presence of G, with or without guest, are characterized by lift-off molecular areas expected for the GS sheet based on single-crystal X-ray structures of homologous bulk crystals. Intercalation of biphenylalkane guests (4-C(n)()H(2)(n)()(+1)-C(6)H(4)-C(6)H(5), n = 1, 4, 6, 10, 16; denoted CnBP) between organosulfonate hydrophobes, which define pocketlike cavities in the GS monolayer host, afford ternary inclusion monolayers with a 1:1 host-guest stoichiometry. These inclusion monolayers are less compressible than the guest-free host, consistent with dense packing of the biphenylalkane moieties of the host and the biphenylalkane guests. The inclusion monolayers are distinguished from the amorphous guest-free host and from selected guanidinium-free mixed monolayers by structural characterization with grazing-angle incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD). The GIXD data for the ternary (G)C16BPS:C16BP and (G)C16BPS:C6BP inclusion monolayers obtained upon compression are consistent with a rectangular unit cell. The dimensions of these unit cells and refinement of the GIXD data suggest a "rotated shifted ribbon" GS hydrogen-bonding motif similar to that observed in some bulk GS crystals, including (G)(ethylbiphenylsulfonate). GIXD reveals that (G)C16BPS:C16BP and (G)C16BPS:C6BP are more crystalline than the corresponding guanidinium-free mixed monolayers. The (G)C16BPS:C6BP inclusion monolayer is stable upon compression, even though the alkyl-alkyl host-guest interactions are reduced due to the shorter hexyl substituents of the guest, demonstrating an important reinforcing role for the hydrogen-bonded GS sheet. The structure of a C16BPS:tetracosane (C24) mixed monolayer is independent of G; the unit cell symmetry and dimensions suggest a structure governed by alkyl-alkane interactions that prohibit formation of a GS network. These results illustrate that the existence of ternary inclusion monolayers with an intact GS network requires guest molecules that are structurally homologous with the hydrophobes of the host, in this case biphenylalkanes. The observation of these inclusion compounds suggests an approach for introducing functional nonamphiphilic molecules to an air-water interface through inclusion in a well-defined host.  相似文献   

19.
The surface phase behavior of di-n-dodecyl hydrogen phosphate (DDP) in Langmuir monolayer and its interactions with L-arginine (L-arg) have been investigated by measuring pi-A isotherms with a film balance and observing monolayer morphology with a Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). The DDP monolayers on pure water show a first-order liquid expanded-liquid condensed (LE-LC) phase transition and form fingering LC domains having uniform brightness at different temperatures. At 15 degrees C, the pi-A isotherms on pure water and on different concentration solutions of L-arg show a limiting molecular area at approximately 0.50 nm(2)/molecule. With increasing the subphase concentration of L-arg up to 4.0 x 10(-4)M, the LE and the LE-LC coexistence regions shift to larger molecular areas and higher surface pressures, respectively. With a further increase in the concentration of L-arg beyond this critical concentration, these isotherms show little or no more expansion. These results have been explained by considering the fact that the L-arg undergoes complexation with the DDP to form L-arg-DDP that remains in equilibrium with the components at the air-water interface. As the concentration of L-arg in the subphase increases, the equilibrium shifts towards the complex. At a concentration of L-arg > or =4.0 x 10(-4)M, the DDP monolayers get saturated and show the characteristics of the new amphiphile, L-arg-DDP. BAM is applied to confirm the above results. When the concentration of the L-arg is <4.0 x 10(-4)M, domains always start forming at an area of approximately 0.64 nm(2)/molecule, which is the critical molecular area for the phase transition in the DDP monolayers on pure water. In contrast, when the monolayers are formed on a solution containing > or =4.0 x 10(-4)M L-arg, comparatively smaller size domains are formed after the appearance of a new cusp point at approximately 0.55 nm(2)/molecule. With an increase in the concentration of L-arg in the subphase, the size of the domains decreases indicating that the fraction of the DDP gradually decreases, whereas the fraction of the complex gradually increases. In addition, a very simple procedure for determination of the stability constant, which is 2.6 x 10(4)M(-1) at 15 degrees C, has been suggested.  相似文献   

20.
2-Hydroxyacids display complex monolayer phase behavior due to the additional hydrogen bonding afforded by the presence of the second hydroxy group. The placement of this group at the position α to the carboxylic acid functionality also introduces the possibility of chelation, a utility important in crystallization including biomineralization. Biomineralization, like many biological processes, is inherently a nonequilibrium process. The nonequilibrium monolayer phase behavior of 2-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid was investigated on each of pure water, calcium chloride, sodium bicarbonate and calcium carbonate crystallizing subphases as a precursor study to a model calcium carbonate biomineralizing system, each at a pH of ~6. The role of the bicarbonate co-ion in manipulating the monolayer structure was determined by comparison with monolayer phase behavior on a sodium chloride subphase. Monolayer phase behavior was probed using surface pressure/area isotherms, surface potential, Brewster angle microscopy, and synchrotron-based grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and X-ray reflectivity. Complex phase behavior was observed for all but the sodium chloride subphase with hydrogen bonding, electrostatic and steric effects defining the symmetry of the monolayer. On a pure water subphase hydrogen bonding dominates with three phases coexisting at low pressures. Introduction of calcium ions into the aqueous subphase ensures strong cation binding to the surfactant head groups through chelation. The monolayer becomes very unstable in the presence of bicarbonate ions within the subphase due to short-range hydrogen bonding interactions between the monolayer and bicarbonate ions facilitated by the sodium cation enhancing surfactant solubility. The combined effects of electrostatics and hydrogen bonding are observed on the calcium carbonate crystallizing subphase.  相似文献   

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