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Dive into the research topics where Nathalie Katsonis is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathalie Katsonis.


Nature | 2011

Electrically driven directional motion of a four-wheeled molecule on a metal surface

Tibor Kudernac; Nopporn Ruangsupapichat; Manfred Parschau; Beatriz Maciá; Nathalie Katsonis; Syuzanna R. Harutyunyan; Karl-Heinz Ernst; Ben L. Feringa

Propelling single molecules in a controlled manner along an unmodified surface remains extremely challenging because it requires molecules that can use light, chemical or electrical energy to modulate their interaction with the surface in a way that generates motion. Nature’s motor proteins have mastered the art of converting conformational changes into directed motion, and have inspired the design of artificial systems such as DNA walkers and light- and redox-driven molecular motors. But although controlled movement of single molecules along a surface has been reported, the molecules in these examples act as passive elements that either diffuse along a preferential direction with equal probability for forward and backward movement or are dragged by an STM tip. Here we present a molecule with four functional units—our previously reported rotary motors—that undergo continuous and defined conformational changes upon sequential electronic and vibrational excitation. Scanning tunnelling microscopy confirms that activation of the conformational changes of the rotors through inelastic electron tunnelling propels the molecule unidirectionally across a Cu(111) surface. The system can be adapted to follow either linear or random surface trajectories or to remain stationary, by tuning the chirality of the individual motor units. Our design provides a starting point for the exploration of more sophisticated molecular mechanical systems with directionally controlled motion.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Conversion of light into macroscopic helical motion

Supitchaya Iamsaard; Sarah Asshoff; Benjamin Matt; Tibor Kudernac; Jeroen Johannes Lambertus Maria Cornelissen; Stephen P. Fletcher; Nathalie Katsonis

A key goal of nanotechnology is the development of artificial machines capable of converting molecular movement into macroscopic work. Although conversion of light into shape changes has been reported and compared to artificial muscles, real applications require work against an external load. Here, we describe the design, synthesis and operation of spring-like materials capable of converting light energy into mechanical work at the macroscopic scale. These versatile materials consist of molecular switches embedded in liquid-crystalline polymer springs. In these springs, molecular movement is converted and amplified into controlled and reversible twisting motions. The springs display complex motion, which includes winding, unwinding and helix inversion, as dictated by their initial shape. Importantly, they can produce work by moving a macroscopic object and mimicking mechanical movements, such as those used by plant tendrils to help the plant access sunlight. These functional materials have potential applications in micromechanical systems, soft robotics and artificial muscles.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2009

Nano-electronic switches

Tibor Kudernac; Nathalie Katsonis; Wesley R. Browne; Bernard Feringa

This Highlight reviews recent advances in developing light-controlled molecular switches that can be of use for molecular and organic electronics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Photoinduced Reorganization of Motor-Doped Chiral Liquid Crystals : Bridging Molecular Isomerization and Texture Rotation

Alessandro Bosco; Mahthild G. M. Jongejan; Rienk Eelkema; Nathalie Katsonis; Ernmanuelle Lacaze; Alberta Ferrarini; Bernard Feringa; Emmanuelle Lacaze

We recently reported that the photoisomerization of molecular motors used as chiral dopants in a cholesteric liquid crystal film induces a rotational reorganization which can be observed by optical microscopy and produces the motion of microscopic objects placed on top of the film (Feringa, B. L.; et al. Nature 2006, 440, 163; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 14397). The mechanism underlying the mesoscopic manifestation of the molecular process was not fully understood, and here we present a joint theoretical and experimental investigation, which provides a detailed insight into the mechanism of texture rotation. This description allows us to identify the interplay between the chemical structure of the chiral dopant and the material properties of the liquid crystal host, and to quantify their role in the observed dynamic phenomenon. We have found that a crucial role is played by the hybrid anchoring of the liquid crystal, with the director parallel to the substrate and perpendicular to the interface with air; in this configuration an almost unperturbed cholesteric helix, with its axis normal to the substrate, is present in most of the film, with strong deformations only close to the free interface. The texture rotation observed in the experiment reflects the rotation of the director during the unwinding of the cholesteric helix, produced by the change in shape of the chiral dopant under photoisomerization. The rotational reorganization is controlled by the photochemical process, via the coupling between the chirality of the dopant and the elastic properties of the liquid crystal host.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Controlling chirality with helix inversion in cholesteric liquid crystals

Nathalie Katsonis; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Alberta Ferrarini

The helical organization of cholesteric liquid crystals is omnipresent in living matter. Achieving control over the structure of the cholesteric helix consequently holds great potential for developing stimuli-responsive materials matching the level of sophistication of biological systems. In particular, inversion of a cholesteric helix is associated with inversion of the circular polarization of the light it reflects. While control over the cholesteric period has been thoroughly investigated, reports on helix inversion are scarcer. Predicting which systems display helix inversion also remains a challenge because of the subtle balance of contributions underlying this phenomenon. Here we provide an overview on recent advances in controlling and understanding helix inversion in cholesteric liquid crystals.


Nature Communications | 2015

Creation and manipulation of topological states in chiral nematic microspheres

Tetiana Orlova; Sarah Asshoff; Tadatsugu Yamaguchi; Nathalie Katsonis; Etienne Brasselet

Topology is a universal concept that is encountered in daily life and is known to determine many static and dynamical properties of matter. Taming and controlling the topology of materials therefore constitutes a contemporary interdisciplinary challenge. Building on the controllable spatial properties of soft matter appears as a relevant strategy to address the challenge, in particular, because it may lead to paradigmatic model systems that allow checking theories experimentally. Here we report experimentally on a wealth of complex free-standing metastable topological architectures at the micron scale, in frustrated chiral nematic droplets. These results support recent works predicting the formation of free-standing knotted and linked disclination structures in confined chiral nematic fluids. We also demonstrate that various kinds of external fields (thermal, electrical and optical) can be used to achieve topological remote control. All this may foster the development of new devices based on topologically structured soft media.


Langmuir | 2009

Two-dimensional molecular patterning by surface-enhanced Zn-porphyrin coordination

Johan Visser; Nathalie Katsonis; Javier Vicario; Ben L. Feringa

In this contribution, we show how zinc-5,10,15,20-meso-tetradodecylporphyrins (Zn-TDPs) self-assemble into stable organized arrays on the surface of graphite, thus positioning their metal center at regular distances from each other, creating a molecular pattern, while retaining the possibility to coordinate additional ligands. We also demonstrate that Zn-TDPs coordinated to 3-nitropyridine display a higher tendency to be adsorbed at the surface of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) than noncoordinated ones. In order to investigate the two-dimensional (2D) self-assembly of coordinated Zn-TDPs, solutions with different relative concentrations of 3-nitropyridine and Zn-TDP were prepared and deposited on the surface of HOPG. STM measurements at the liquid-solid interface reveal that the ratio of coordinated Zn-TDPs over noncoordinated Zn-TDPs is higher at the n-tetradecane/HOPG interface than in n-tetradecane solution. This enhanced binding of the axial ligand at the liquid/solid interface is likely related to the fact that physisorbed Zn-TDPs are better binding sites for nitropyridines.


Langmuir | 2008

Photochromism and Electrochemistry of a Dithienylcyclopentene Electroactive Polymer

Philana V. Wesenhagen; Jetsuda Areephong; Tatiana Fernandez Landaluce; Nicolas Heureux; Nathalie Katsonis; Johan Hjelm; Petra Rudolf; Wesley R. Browne; Ben L. Feringa

A bifunctional substituted dithienylcyclopentene photochromic switch bearing electropolymerisable methoxystyryl units, which enable immobilization of the photochromic unit on conducting substrates, is reported. The spectroscopic, electrochemical, and photochemical properties of a monomer in solution are compared with those of the polymer formed through oxidative electropolymerization. The electroactive polymer films prepared on gold, platinum, glassy carbon, and indium titanium oxide (ITO) electrodes were characterized by cyclic voltammetry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The thickness of the films formed is found to be limited to several monolayer equivalents. The photochromic properties and stability of the polymer films have been investigated by UV/vis spectroscopy, electrochemistry, and XPS. Although the films are electrochemically and photochemically stable, their mechanical stability with respect to adhesion to the electrode was found to be sensitive to both the solvent and the electrode material employed, with more apolar solvents, glassy carbon, and ITO electrodes providing good adhesion of the polymer film. The polymer film is formed consistently as a thin film and can be switched both optically and electrochemically between the open and closed state of the photochromic dithienylethene moiety.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Superstructures of chiral nematic microspheres as all-optical switchable distributors of light

Sarah J. Aβhoff; Sertan Sukas; Tadatsugu Yamaguchi; Catharina A. Hommersom; Séverine Le Gac; Nathalie Katsonis

Light technology is based on generating, detecting and controlling the wavelength, polarization and direction of light. Emerging applications range from electronics and telecommunication to health, defence and security. In particular, data transmission and communication technologies are currently asking for increasingly complex and fast devices, and therefore there is a growing interest in materials that can be used to transmit light and also to control the distribution of light in space and time. Here, we design chiral nematic microspheres whose shape enables them to reflect light of different wavelengths and handedness in all directions. Assembled in organized hexagonal superstructures, these microspheres of well-defined sizes communicate optically with high selectivity for the colour and chirality of light. Importantly, when the microspheres are doped with photo-responsive molecular switches, their chiroptical communication can be tuned, both gradually in wavelength and reversibly in polarization. Since the kinetics of the “on” and “off” switching can be adjusted by molecular engineering of the dopants and because the photonic cross-communication is selective with respect to the chirality of the incoming light, these photo-responsive microspheres show potential for chiroptical all-optical distributors and switches, in which wavelength, chirality and direction of the reflected light can be controlled independently and reversibly.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Intermolecular repulsion through interfacial attraction: toward engineering of polymorphs.

Tibor Kudernac; Nadja Sändig; Tatiana Fernandez Landaluce; Bart J. van Wees; Petra Rudolf; Nathalie Katsonis; Francesco Zerbetto; Ben L. Feringa

Understanding the formation of crystalline polymorphs is of importance for various applications of materials science. Polymorphism of Schiff base derivatives has recently attracted considerable attention because of its influence on photochromic and thermochromic properties of their 3D crystals. The present investigation extends the study of Schiff base polymorphism to the molecular level by using a combination of scanning tunneling microscopy at the liquid/solid interface and molecular modeling. It is demonstrated that polymorphism of 4-(dodecyloxy)-N-(4-dodecylphenyl)-2-hydroxybenzaldimine (PHB), a Schiff base substituted by alkyl side chains, can occur in 2D crystals when PHB is adsorbed on a surface that is able to exchange charge with the molecule. In particular, on Au(111), PHB molecules self-organize not only into a columnar packing but also in dimer structures. Theoretical and experimental results demonstrate that the dimer-based structure observed on Au(111) originates from molecule/surface interactions, which in turn modify molecule/molecule interactions. The results highlight that the Au(111) substrate is far from being a passive part of the self-assembled system and plays a crucial role in the morphology of 2D polymorphs.

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Emmanuelle Lacaze

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Catharina A. Hommersom

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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Federico Lancia

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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