Enabling three-dimensional porous architectures via carbonyl functionalization and molecular-specific organic-SERS platforms

Abstract

Nanostructured films of organic semiconductors with low lying LUMO orbitals can enhance Raman signals via a chemical enhancement mechanism but currently the material choice is limited to fluorinated oligothiophenes. Here, the authors investigate the growth of a porous thienoacene film enabled by carbonyls and demonstrate molecular specific organic-SERS platforms. Molecular engineering via functionalization has been a great tool to tune noncovalent intermolecular interactions. Herein, we demonstrate three-dimensional highly crystalline nanostructured D(C7CO)-BTBT films via carbonyl-functionalization of a fused thienoacene pi-system, and strong Raman signal enhancements in Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) are realized. The small molecule could be prepared on the gram scale with a facile synthesis-purification. In the engineered films, polar functionalization induces favorable out-of-plane crystal growth via zigzag motif of dipolar C = O center dot center dot center dot C = O interactions and hydrogen bonds, and strengthens pi-interactions. A unique two-stage film growth behavior is identified with an edge-on-to-face-on molecular orientation transition driven by hydrophobicity. The analysis of the electronic structures and the ratio of the anti-Stokes/Stokes SERS signals suggests that the pi-extended/stabilized LUMOs with varied crystalline face-on orientations provide the key properties in the chemical enhancement mechanism. A molecule-specific Raman signal enhancement is also demonstrated on a high-LUMO organic platform. Our results demonstrate a promising guidance towards realizing low-cost SERS-active semiconducting materials, increasing structural versatility of organic-SERS platforms, and advancing molecule-specific sensing via molecular engineering.

Description

H.U., G.D. and I.D. acknowledge support from the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) grant number 216M430. G.D. also thanks TUBITAK (grant no: 119C025) for the financial support. We thank professor Fahri Alkan for fruitful discussions on the theoretical perspective of this study.

Keywords

ENHANCED RAMAN-SCATTERING, HYDROGEN-BOND

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Volume

Volume 12 Issue 1

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