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Dive into the research topics where Gad Fuks is active.

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Featured researches published by Gad Fuks.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Macroscopic contraction of a gel induced by the integrated motion of light-driven molecular motors

Quan Li; Gad Fuks; Emilie Moulin; Mounir Maaloum; Michel Rawiso; Igor Kulic; Justin T. Foy; Nicolas Giuseppone

Making molecular machines that can be useful in the macroscopic world is a challenging long-term goal of nanoscience. Inspired by the protein machinery found in biological systems, and based on the theoretical understanding of the physics of motion at the nanoscale, organic chemists have developed a number of molecules that can produce work by contraction or rotation when triggered by various external chemical or physical stimuli. In particular, basic molecular switches that commute between at least two thermodynamic minima and more advanced molecular motors that behave as dissipative units working far from equilibrium when fuelled with external energy have been reported. However, despite recent progress, the ultimate challenge of coordinating individual molecular motors in a continuous mechanical process that can have a measurable effect at the macroscale has remained elusive. Here, we show that by integrating light-driven unidirectional molecular rotors as reticulating units in a polymer gel, it is possible to amplify their individual motions to achieve macroscopic contraction of the material. Our system uses the incoming light to operate under far-from-equilibrium conditions, and the work produced by the motor in the photostationary state is used to twist the entangled polymer chains up to the collapse of the gel. Our design could be a starting point to integrate nanomotors in metastable materials to store energy and eventually to convert it.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Hierarchical Self-Assembly of Supramolecular Muscle-Like Fibers

Antoine Goujon; Guangyan Du; Emilie Moulin; Gad Fuks; Mounir Maaloum; Eric Buhler; Nicolas Giuseppone

An acid-base switchable [c2]daisy chain rotaxane terminated with two 2,6-diacetylamino pyridine units has been self-assembled with a bis(uracil) linker. The complementary hydrogen-bond recognition patterns, together with lateral van der Waals aggregations, result in the hierarchical formation of unidimensional supramolecular polymers associated in bundles of muscle-like fibers. Microscopic and scattering techniques reveal that the mesoscopic structure of these bundles depends on the extended or contracted states that the rotaxanes show within individual polymer chains. The observed local dynamics span over several length scales because of a combination of supramolecular and mechanical bonds. This work illustrates the possibility to modify the hierarchical mesoscopic structuring of large polymeric systems by the integrated actuation of individual molecular machines.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Healable Supramolecular Polymers as Organic Metals

Joseph J. Armao; Mounir Maaloum; Thomas Ellis; Gad Fuks; Michel Rawiso; Emilie Moulin; Nicolas Giuseppone

Organic materials exhibiting metallic behavior are promising for numerous applications ranging from printed nanocircuits to large area electronics. However, the optimization of electronic conduction in organic metals such as charge-transfer salts or doped conjugated polymers requires high crystallinity, which is detrimental to their processability. To overcome this problem, the combination of the electronic properties of metal-like materials with the mechanical properties of soft self-assembled systems is attractive but necessitates the absence of structural defects in a regular lattice. Here we describe a one-dimensional supramolecular polymer in which photoinduced through-space charge-transfer complexes lead to highly coherent domains with delocalized electronic states displaying metallic behavior. We also reveal that diffusion of supramolecular polarons in the nanowires repairs structural defects thereby improving their conduction. The ability to access metallic properties from mendable self-assemblies extends the current understanding of both fields and opens a wide range of processing techniques for applications in organic electronics.


ACS Nano | 2015

Light-controlled morphologies of self-assembled triarylamine-fullerene conjugates.

Eric Busseron; Juan-José Cid; Adrian Wolf; Guangyan Du; Emilie Moulin; Gad Fuks; Mounir Maaloum; Prasad Polavarapu; Adrian Ruff; Ann-Kathrin Saur; Sabine Ludwigs; Nicolas Giuseppone

A family of triarylamine-fullerene conjugates has been synthesized and shown to self-assemble upon light stimulation in chlorinated solvents. This light-induced process primarily involves excitation of triarylamine derivatives, which then oxidize and stack with their neutral counterparts to form charge transfer complexes in the form of p-conducting channels, while fullerenes are consequently enforced in coaxial n-conducting columnar arrangements. These supramolecular heterojunctions can be organized over very long distances in micrometric fibers when a controlled amount of photons is provided from a white light source to initiate the process. Surprisingly, when sunlight or UV light is used instead, the nanostructuration leads to monodisperse spherical objects due to the nature of the nucleation-growth process involved in the stacks formation. This control over the supramolecular morphology of organic self-assemblies using the nature of light is of general interest for the design of functional responsive materials.


Nanoscale | 2012

Light-triggered self-assembly of triarylamine-based nanospheres

Emilie Moulin; Frédéric Niess; Gad Fuks; Nicolas Jouault; Eric Buhler; Nicolas Giuseppone

Tailored triarylamine units modified with terpyridine ligands were coordinated to Zn(2+) ions and characterized as discrete dimeric entities. Interestingly, when these complexes were subsequently irradiated with simple visible light in chloroform, they readily self-assembled into monodisperse spheres with a mean diameter of 160 nm.


ACS Nano | 2016

Supramolecular Organic Nanowires as Plasmonic Interconnects

Joseph J. Armao; Yuya Domoto; Teruhiko Umehara; Mounir Maaloum; Christophe Contal; Gad Fuks; Emilie Moulin; Gero Decher; Nicolas Javahiraly; Nicolas Giuseppone

Metallic nanostructures are able to interact with an incident electromagnetic field at subwavelength scales by plasmon resonance which involves the collective oscillation of conduction electrons localized at their surfaces. Among several possible applications of this phenomenon, the theoretical prediction is that optical circuits connecting multiple plasmonic elements will surpass classical electronic circuits at nanoscale because of their much faster light-based information processing. However, the placement and coupling of metallic elements smaller than optical wavelengths currently remain a formidable challenge by top-down manipulations. Here, we show that organic supramolecular triarylamine nanowires of ≈1 nm in diameter are able to act as plasmonic waveguides. Their self-assembly into plasmonic interconnects between arrays of gold nanoparticles leads to the bottom-up construction of basic optical nanocircuits. When the resonance modes of these metallic nanoparticles are coupled through the organic nanowires, the optical conductivity of the plasmonic layer dramatically increases from 259 to 4271 Ω(-1)·cm(-1). We explain this effect by the coupling of a hot electron/hole pair in the nanoparticle antenna with the half-filled polaronic band of the organic nanowire. We also demonstrate that the whole hybrid system can be described by using the abstraction of the lumped circuit theory, with a far field optical response which depends on the number of interconnects. Overall, our supramolecular bottom-up approach opens the possibility to implement processable, soft, and low cost organic plasmonic interconnects into a large number of applications going from sensing to metamaterials and information technologies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Anisotropic Self-Assembly of Supramolecular Polymers and Plasmonic Nanoparticles at the Liquid–Liquid Interface

Joseph J. ArmaoIV; Irina A. Nyrkova; Gad Fuks; Artem Osypenko; Mounir Maaloum; Emilie Moulin; Raul Arenal; Odile Gavat; Alexander N. Semenov; Nicolas Giuseppone

The study of supramolecular polymers in the bulk, in diluted solution, and at the solid–liquid interface has recently become a major topic of interest, going from fundamental aspects to applications in materials science. However, examples of supramolecular polymers at the liquid–liquid interface are mostly unexplored. Here, we describe the supramolecular polymerization of triarylamine molecules and their light-triggered organization at a chloroform–water interface. The resulting interfacial nematic layer of these 1D supramolecular polymers is further used as a template for the precise alignment of spherical gold nanoparticles coming from the water phase. These hybrid thin films are spontaneously formed in a single process, without chemical prefunctionalization of the metallic nanoparticles, and their ordering is improved by centrifugation. The resulting polymer chains and strings of nanoparticles can be co-aligned with high anisotropy over very large distances. By using a combination of experimental and theoretical investigations, we decipher the full sequence of this oriented self-assembly process. In such a highly anisotropic configuration, electron energy loss spectroscopy reveals that the self-assembled nanoparticles behave as plasmonic waveguides.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Hierarchical supramolecular structuring and dynamical properties of water soluble polyethylene glycol-perylene self-assemblies.

Nicolas Jouault; Yunjie Xiang; Emilie Moulin; Gad Fuks; Nicolas Giuseppone; Eric Buhler

The structural and dynamical properties of dilute aqueous solutions of poly(ethylene glycol)-perylene diimides (PEG(n)-PDI) have been investigated by means of static and dynamic light scattering, TEM microscopy, and small-angle X-ray scattering experiments. The amphiphilic PEG(n)-PDI molecules first self-assemble into stable and compact primary stacks of a few units of planar PDI through hydrophobic and π-π interactions. These primary stacks subsequently arrange in large and globular aggregates of typically 100-250 nm via weak PEG chain interpenetration. Surprisingly, the scattered electric field autocorrelation function g((1))(q,t) measured by dynamic light scattering evolves over very long periods of times (several months) and up to a bimodal distribution. The fast relaxation mechanism is associated to the diffusion of free primary stacks, whereas the slower relaxation still indicates the presence of large self-assemblies. Kinetic experiments show that the large supramolecular aggregates slowly release the free primary stacks whose proportion increases with time. This dissociation depends on several parameters such as PEG side chain length, total concentration, and shaking.


Langmuir | 2015

Hydrogen-Bonded Multifunctional Supramolecular Copolymers in Water

Yunjie Xiang; Emilie Moulin; Eric Buhler; Mounir Maaloum; Gad Fuks; Nicolas Giuseppone

We have investigated the self-assembly in water of molecules having a single hydrophobic bis-urea domain linked to different hydrophilic functional side chains, i.e., bioactive peptidic residues and fluorescent cyanine dyes. By using a combination of spectroscopy, scattering, and microscopy techniques, we show that each one of these molecules can individually produce well-defined nanostructures such as twisted ribbons, two-dimensional plates, or branched fibers. Interestingly, when these monomers of different functionalities are mixed in an equimolar ratio, supramolecular copolymers are preferred to narcissistic segregation. Radiation scattering and imaging techniques demonstrate that one of the molecular units dictates the formation of a preferential nanostructure, and optical spectroscopies reveal the alternated nature of the copolymerization process. This work illustrates how social self-sorting in H-bond supramolecular polymers can give straightforward access to multifunctional supramolecular copolymers.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2006

Tunable fluorene-based dynamers through constitutional dynamic chemistry.

Nicolas Giuseppone; Gad Fuks; Jean-Marie Lehn

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Emilie Moulin

University of Strasbourg

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Mounir Maaloum

University of Strasbourg

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Antoine Goujon

University of Strasbourg

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Guangyan Du

University of Strasbourg

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Justin T. Foy

University of Strasbourg

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Quan Li

University of Strasbourg

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