Conducting nanofibers and organogels derived from the self-assembly of tetrathiafulvalene-appended dipeptides

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Abstract

We demonstrate the nonaqueous self-assembly of a low-molecular-mass organic gelator based on an electroactive p-type tetrathiafulvalene (TTF)-dipeptide bioconjugate. We show that a TTF moiety appended with diphenylalanine amide derivative (TTF-FF-NH2) self-assembles into one-dimensional nanofibers that further lead to the formation of self-supporting organogels in chloroform and ethyl acetate. Upon doping of the gels with electron acceptors (TCNQ/iodine vapor), stable two-component charge transfer gels are produced in chloroform and ethyl acetate. These gels are characterized by various spectroscopy (UV-vis-NIR, FTIR, and CD), microscopy (AFM and TEM), rheology, and cyclic voltammetry techniques. Furthermore, conductivity measurements performed on TTF-FF-NH2 xerogel nanofiber networks formed between gold electrodes on a glass surface indicate that these nanofibers show a remarkable enhancement in the conductivity after doping with TCNQ.

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Nalluri, S. K. rishna M., Shivarova, N., Kanibolotsky, A. L., Zelzer, M., Gupta, S., Frederix, P. W. J. M., … Ulijn, R. V. (2014). Conducting nanofibers and organogels derived from the self-assembly of tetrathiafulvalene-appended dipeptides. Langmuir : The ACS Journal of Surfaces and Colloids, 30(41), 12429–12437. https://doi.org/10.1021/la503459y

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