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Dive into the research topics where Brandon E. Hirsch is active.

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Featured researches published by Brandon E. Hirsch.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Multifunctional Tricarbazolo Triazolophane Macrocycles: One‐Pot Preparation, Anion Binding, and Hierarchical Self‐Organization of Multilayers

Semin Lee; Brandon E. Hirsch; Yun Liu; James R. Dobscha; David W. Burke; Steven L. Tait; Amar H. Flood

Programming the synthesis and self-assembly of molecules is a compelling strategy for the bottom-up fabrication of ordered materials. To this end, shape-persistent macrocycles were designed with alternating carbazoles and triazoles to program a one-pot synthesis and to bind large anions. The macrocycles bind anions that were once considered too weak to be coordinated, such as PF6 (-) , with surprisingly high affinities (β2 =10(11)  M(-2) in 80:20 chloroform/methanol) and positive cooperativity, α=(4 K2 /K1 )=1200. We also discovered that the macrocycles assemble into ultrathin films of hierarchically ordered tubes on graphite surfaces. The remarkable surface-templated self-assembly properties, as was observed by using scanning tunneling microscopy, are attributed to the complementary pairing of alternating triazoles and carbazoles inscribed into both the co-facial and edge-sharing seams that exist between shape-persistent macrocycles. The multilayer assembly is also consistent with the high degree of molecular self-association observed in solution, with self-association constants of K=300 000 M(-1) (chloroform/methanol 80:20). Scanning tunneling microscopy data also showed that surface assemblies readily sequester iodide anions from solution, modulating their assembly. This multifunctional macrocycle provides a foundation for materials composed of hierarchically organized and nanotubular self-assemblies.


ACS Nano | 2014

Selective anion-induced crystal switching and binding in surface monolayers modulated by electric fields from scanning probes.

Brandon E. Hirsch; Kevin P. McDonald; Bo Qiao; Amar H. Flood; Steven L. Tait

Anion-selective (Br(-) and I(-)) and voltage-driven crystal switching between two differently packed phases (α ⇆ β) was observed in 2D crystalline monolayers of aryl-triazole receptors ordered at solution-graphite interfaces. Addition of Br(-) and I(-) was found to stimulate the α → β phase transformation and to produce ion binding to the β phase assembly, while Cl(-) and BF4(-) addition retained the α phase. Unlike all other surface assemblies of either charged molecules or ion-templated 2D crystallization of metal-ligand or receptor-based adsorbates, the polarity of the electric field between the localized scanning tip and the graphite substrate was found to correlate with phase switching: β → α is driven at -1.5 V, while α → β occurs at +1.1 V. Ion-pairing between the countercations and the guest anions was also observed. These observations are supported by control studies including variation of anion species, relative anion concentration, surface temperature, tip voltage, and scanning time.


ACS Nano | 2016

Self-Assembly under Confinement: Nanocorrals for Understanding Fundamentals of 2D Crystallization

Lander Verstraete; John Greenwood; Brandon E. Hirsch; Steven De Feyter

Nanocorrals with different size, shape, and orientation are created on covalently modified highly oriented pyrolytic graphite surfaces using scanning probe nanolithography, i.e., nanoshaving. Alkylated diacetylene molecules undergo laterally confined supramolecular self-assembly within these corrals. When nanoshaving is performed in situ, at the liquid–solid interface, the orientation of the supramolecular lamellae structure is directionally influenced by the gradual graphite surface exposure. Careful choice of the nanoshaving direction with respect to the substrate symmetry axes promotes alignment of the supramolecular lamellae within the corral. Self-assembly occurring inside corrals of different size and shape reveals the importance of geometric and kinetic constraints controlled by the nanoshaving process. Finally, seed-mediated crystallization studies demonstrate confinement control over nucleation and growth principles.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Living on the edge: Tuning supramolecular interactions to design two-dimensional organic crystals near the boundary of two stable structural phases

Brandon E. Hirsch; Kevin P. McDonald; Amar H. Flood; Steven L. Tait

One of the benefits of supramolecular assemblies that form at dynamic interfaces is the opportunity to develop condensed phase systems that respond to environmental stimuli. A prerequisite of this responsive behavior is that the supramolecular system be designed to sit very near the stability of two or more crystal structures. We have created such a bi-phasic system with aryl-triazole oligomers by investigating how phase morphology is controlled by the interplay between interactions that involve the oligomers dipolar cores (Δμ = 3.5 debye), van der Waals contacts of their pendant alkyl chains (C4-C18), and close-contact hydrogen bonding. Scanning tunneling microscopy experiments conducted at the solution-graphite interface allow sub-molecular resolution of the ordered monolayers to unambiguously determine the packing and structure of two principle phases, α and β. The system is balanced very near the edge of phase stability, evidenced by co-existent phases present over short time frames and by the changes in preference between the two 2D supramolecular assemblies that occur with small modifications to the molecular structure. We demonstrate that the bi-phasic behavior can be understood as a balance between electrostatic interactions and van der Waals contacts, two variables within a larger parameter space, allowing synthetic design to move this solution-surface system across the stability boundary of different condensed-phase structures. These findings are a foundation for the development of environmentally responsive 2D supramolecular arrays.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Ion-Pair Oligomerization of Chromogenic Triangulenium Cations with Cyanostar-Modified Anions That Controls Emission in Hierarchical Materials

Bo Qiao; Brandon E. Hirsch; Semin Lee; Maren Pink; Chun-Hsing Chen; Bo W. Laursen; Amar H. Flood

The hierarchical assembly of colored cationic molecules with receptor-modified counteranions can be used to control optical properties in materials. However, our knowledge of when the optical properties emerge in the hierarchical organization and the variety of cation-anion salts that are available to create these materials is limited. In this work, we extend the salts from small halides to large inorganic anions and determine how the structure coevolves with the emission properties using solution assemblies. We study the chromogenic trioxatriangulenium (TOTA+) cation and its coassembly with cyanostar (CS) macrocycles selected to modify tetrafluoroborate (BF4-) counteranions through formation of 2:1 sandwich complexes. In the solid state, the TOTA+ cation stacks in an alternating manner with the sandwich complexes producing new red-shifted emission and absorption bands. Critical to assigning the structural origin of the new optical features across the four levels of organization (1° → 4°) is the selection of specific solvents to produce and characterize different assemblies present in the hierarchical structure. A key species is the electrostatically stabilized ion pair between the TOTA+ cation and sandwich complex. The red-shifted features only emerge when the ion pairs oligomerize together into larger (TOTA·[CS2BF4])n assemblies. New electronic states emerge as a result of multiple copies of the TOTA+ making π-contact with cyanostar-anion complexes. Our findings and the ease with which the materials can be prepared as crystals and films by mixing the salt with a receptor provide a strong platform for the de novo design of new optical materials.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Biasing Enantiomorph Formation via Geometric Confinement: Nanocorrals for Chiral Induction at the Liquid-Solid Interface

Johannes Seibel; Lander Verstraete; Brandon E. Hirsch; Ana M. Bragança; Steven De Feyter

Nanocorrals created by scanning probe lithography on covalently modified graphite surfaces are used to induce a chiral bias in the enantiomorphic assembly of a prochiral molecule at the liquid/graphite interface. By controlling the orientation of the nanocorrals with respect to the underlying graphite surface, the nanocorral handedness can be freely chosen and thus a chiral bias in molecular self-assembly is created at an achiral surface solely by the scanning probe lithography process.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Self-Assembled Polystyrene Beads for Templated Covalent Functionalization of Graphitic Substrates using Diazonium Chemistry

Hans Van Gorp; Peter Walke; Ana M. Bragança; John Greenwood; Oleksandr Ivasenko; Brandon E. Hirsch; Steven De Feyter

A network of self-assembled polystyrene beads was employed as a lithographic mask during covalent functionalization reactions on graphitic surfaces to create nanocorrals for confined molecular self-assembly studies. The beads were initially assembled into hexagonal arrays at the air-liquid interface and then transferred to the substrate surface. Subsequent electrochemical grafting reactions involving aryl diazonium molecules created covalently bound molecular units that were localized in the void space between the nanospheres. Removal of the bead template exposed hexagonally arranged circular nanocorrals separated by regions of chemisorbed molecules. Small molecule self-assembly was then investigated inside the resultant nanocorrals using scanning tunneling microscopy to highlight localized confinement effects. Overall, this work illustrates the utility of self-assembly principles to transcend length scale gaps in the development of hierarchically patterned molecular materials.


Nanotechnology | 2017

Scanning probe microscopy induced surface modifications of the topological insulator Bi2Te3 in different environments

Asteriona-Maria Netsou; Umamahesh Thupakula; Jolien Debehets; Taishi Chen; Brandon E. Hirsch; A. Volodin; Zhe Li; Fengqi Song; Jin Won Seo; Steven De Feyter; Koen Schouteden; Chris Van Haesendonck

We investigated the topological insulator (TI) Bi2Te3 in four different environments (ambient, ultra-high vacuum (UHV), nitrogen gas and organic solvent environment) using scanning probe microscopy (SPM) techniques. Upon prolonged exposure to ambient conditions and organic solvent environments the cleaved surface of the pristine Bi2Te3 is observed to be strongly modified during SPM measurements, while imaging of freshly cleaved Bi2Te3 in UHV and nitrogen gas shows considerably less changes of the Bi2Te3 surface. We conclude that the reduced surface stability upon exposure to ambient conditions is triggered by adsorption of molecular species from ambient, including H2O, CO2, etc which is verified by Auger electron spectroscopy. Our findings of the drastic impact of exposure to ambient on the Bi2Te3 surface are crucial for further in-depth studies of the intrinsic properties of the TI Bi2Te3 and for potential applications that include room temperature TI based devices operated under ambient conditions.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Anion-induced dimerization of 5-fold symmetric cyanostars in 3D crystalline solids and 2D self-assembled crystals

Brandon E. Hirsch; Semin Lee; Bo Qiao; Chun-Hsing Chen; Kevin P. McDonald; Steven L. Tait; Amar H. Flood


Chemical Communications | 2017

Confined polydiacetylene polymerization reactions for programmed length control

Lander Verstraete; Brandon E. Hirsch; John Greenwood; Steven De Feyter

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Steven De Feyter

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Lander Verstraete

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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John Greenwood

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Ana M. Bragança

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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