Introduction

The high level of performance of proteins and nucleic acids in terms of function is not only the result of their chemical (primary) structure but also of the implicit non-covalent intramolecular interactions between specific units in their sequence that promote folding into a well-defined (secondary and tertiary) three-dimensional structure. Recreating this feature on synthetic systems would not only allow reproducing biological functions but also developing new functions that align with our technological needs. This has inspired the development of conformationally ordered synthetic oligomers known as foldamers1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8, which are able to adopt folded conformations through non-covalent intramolecular interactions encoded in their primary structure. In the last years, there have been remarkable advances in the design of foldamers that self-assemble into well-defined structural motifs1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8, such as helices, pillars and sheets, among others. Many foldamers have been explored in diverse fields including protein mimicking9,10,11,12,13,14,15, molecular recognition16,17,18, self-assembly19,20,21, and photoinduced electron and energy transfer22,23,24,25, with very promising results.

Charge transport in single molecules is of utmost importance in the development of molecular-scale electronic components. Among these, molecular wires26,27,28,29,30,31 show a prominent position since they allow interconnecting different elements giving rise to complex molecular circuitry and to the transduction of biochemical events. A lot of effort26,27,28,29,30,31 has been devoted to understanding through-bond charge transport across molecular wires with different lengths and conjugation to quantify their charge transport capabilities and to establish the charge transport mechanism. However, in higher-order systems, such as biological systems and organic solids, long-range electron transport does not only depend on the inherent properties of the individual molecules imposed by their chemical structure and π-conjugation but also on the spatial organization of such molecules32,33. In fact, a strong electronic coupling between the frontier orbitals of adjacent molecules, which is often associated with an excellent spatial overlap between their π-systems, is necessary to ensure efficient charge transport. This has motivated the study of synthetic molecular wires that impose through-space charge transport schemes either by a combined though-bond/through-space channel34,35,36,37,38 or by a through-space channel39,40,41,42, and also of DNA43,44,45,46,47,48,49 in which base pairs are stacked at virtually the graphitic interlayer distance.

Herein, we report a new family of foldamers consisting of an increasing number of anthracene units, which fold by a combination of intramolecular hydrogen bonds and aromatic interactions. Such folding process opens up an efficient through-space charge transport channel across the interacting anthracene moieties (Fig. 1). As a matter of fact, single-molecule conductance measurements carried out on this series of foldamers, using the scanning tunnelling microscopy-based break junction (STM-BJ) technique50,51, reveal exceptionally high conductance values (G) in the order of 10−1 G0 and a low length decay constant (ß) of 0.02 Å−1. These values exceed the G and ß values observed in molecular junctions that make use of through-space charge transport pathways34,37,42 (G=10−4 to 10−2 G0, ß=0.21 to 1.16 Å−1), including DNA43,44,48 (G=10−4 to 10−2 G0, ß=0.18 to 0.43 Å−1).

Figure 1: π-Folded molecular junctions.
figure 1

Schematic representation of the folding and anchoring processes needed to obtain π-folded molecular junctions from a representative member of the foldamer family studied in this work.

Results

Design and synthesis

As our foldamers, we have designed and synthesized a series of oligomeric structures that combine 9,10-dimethyleneanthracene units stitched together by 2,6-pyridinedicarboxamides (Fig. 2). The series shows an increasing number of anthracene moieties: dimer-NH2; trimer-NH2; tetramer-NH2; and pentamer-NH2. Anthracenes have been selected among other acenes because of their well-balanced properties in terms of charge transport, stability and solubility52. The presence of the 2,6-pyridinedicarboxamides53 promotes a sigmoidal conformation because of the favourable intramolecular hydrogen-bonding interactions. This folded conformation is reinforced by aromatic interactions between the anthracene units, which are also favoured by the optimal parallel arrangement and the flexibility provided by the methylene groups that connect the amide and the anthracene moieties. Triisopropylsilyl (TIPS) groups have been introduced in the pyridine units to ensure the solubility of the oligomers. Terminal amine groups have been selected as they have proven to be effective anchoring groups for attaining single-molecule junctions54.

Figure 2: Chemical structures of the foldamers.
figure 2

Structures of the complete -NHBoc and -NH2 foldamer series studied in this work: dimer-NHBoc, dimer-NH2, trimer-NHBoc, trimer-NH2, tetramer-NHBoc, tetramer-NH2, pentamer-NHBoc, and pentamer-NH2. Arrows indicate the transformation of the -NHBoc series into the -NH2 series.

The oligomers were first synthesized as tert-butoxycarbonyl-protected amines (-NHBoc), which were deprotected afterwards in acidic media to make available the terminal amines (-NH2) as anchoring groups. The structure of both protected and deprotected foldamer series has been confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (coupled to a time-of-flight (TOF) analyser) mass spectrometry. All details of the synthesis and characterization of the oligomers are given in the supporting information (Supplementary Note 1).

Determination of the folded structure

A combination of X-ray crystallography, NMR, ultraviolet–visible absorption and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy, infrared ion dip spectroscopy and theoretical calculations provide strong evidence that the oligomers adopt a folded structure.

Crystals suitable for X-ray crystallography could be obtained for trimer-NHBoc from dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solutions. The X-ray diffraction analysis confirms a sigmoidal and folded structure of trimer-NHBoc and also provides an insight into the interactions between the anthracene moieties in the solid state (Fig. 3a). Remarkably, even considering the interference of DMSO with the folding process—the X-ray structure reveals the presence of two DMSO molecules bound to the 2,6-pyridinedicarboxamides by hydrogen bonds—the high predisposition of the anthracene moieties to interact between each other is evidenced. In fact, the central anthracene adopts a CH–π conformation by flipping over the DMSO molecules to stick to the two external anthracene moieties.

Figure 3: Structural characterization of the foldamers.
figure 3

(a) Solid-state structure of trimer-NHBoc with two DMSO molecules (highlighted in yellow). (b) Chemical structure of A-NHBoc. (c) NMR spectra of the foldamer NHBoc series at 25 °C. (d) Two-dimensional DOSY NMR of pentamer-NHBoc at 25 °C. (e) VT-NMR of pentamer-NHBoc. (f) Absorption and (g) PL spectra of the NHBoc foldamer series at 25 °C. Infrared ion dip spectrum of (h) dimer-NHBoc and (i) trimer-NHBoc. The triangles in be indicate the signals that correspond to anthracene protons.

To study the folding process in solution, we carry out all the experiments with the NHBoc foldamer series as it represents a closer model to the break-junction scenario, in which the free amines are anchored to the gold tips. 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane (TCE) is selected as a solvent to carry out the studies because the oligomers are highly soluble in it; it has a high boiling point (146 °C) optimal for the break-junction studies; and it has a low hydrogen bond basicity (ΣβH=0.08)55, which favours the formation of intramolecular hydrogen bonds that hold together the 2,6-pyridinedicarboxamide backbone in a sigmoidal configuration. The NMR anthracene aromatic signals of dimer-NHBoc and trimer-NHBoc in TCE-d2 at 25 °C appear shifted upfield and broadened in comparison to the Boc-protected 9,10-bis(aminomethyl)anthracene (A-NHBoc) that is used as a reference (Fig. 3b,c). This is consistent with the close proximity between anthracene moieties, which results in the observed shielded signals as an effect of anisotropy. Moreover, a more substantial broadening is clearly observed in the NMR spectra of tetramer-NHBoc and pentamer-NHBoc that leads to an almost complete disappearance of the aromatic signals. We first ascribed this effect to the aggregation of the tetramer-NHBoc and pentamer-NHBoc in solution at NMR concentrations (10−3 to 10−4 M). However, this contradicts the high solubility of the whole NHBoc foldamer series in TCE. Two-dimensional diffusion-ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) NMR studies at 25 °C reveal that the broadening of the aromatic signals is indeed not related to aggregation in solution, as the signals of the oligomers diffuse at the same rate, which means that the oligomers are monodisperse species in solution (Fig. 3d). Therefore, the complex NMR observed for tetramer-NHBoc and pentamer-NHBoc indicates the coexistence of multiple conformers at room temperature in a complex dynamic equilibrium. This is supported by variable temperature NMR (VT-NMR) experiments carried out from –40 to 140 °C that show how the complex fine structure of the pentamer-NHBoc coalesces at increasing temperatures into a simpler NMR spectrum that can be easily assigned to the structure (Fig. 3e), as the high temperatures disrupt the intramolecular interactions, unfolding the oligomers.

The ultraviolet–visible electronic spectra in TCE showed the typical features of anthracene derivatives with four vibronic bands on the main electronic absorption (Fig. 3f). An electronic interaction between anthracene moieties is clearly observed, as the absorption bands appear increasingly bathochromically shifted with an increasing number of anthracene units in the oligomers. When dimer-NHBoc was compared with reference A-NHBoc, a bathochromic shift (Δλ) of 1.0 nm was observed. The electronic interactions between anthracenes become more evident when increasing the number of anthracenes in the oligomers as the bathochromic shifts become increasingly larger in trimer-NHBoc (Δλ=1.5 nm), tetramer-NHBoc (Δλ=2.0 nm) and pentamer-NHBoc (Δλ=5.5 nm), when compared with A-NHBoc, respectively. Almost invariable changes were observed in the absorption spectra on dilution (from 10−4 to 10−6 M), which is consistent with the intramolecular nature of the interactions between anthracene units.

The intramolecular aromatic interactions between anthracenes are also evidenced in the ultraviolet–visible PL studies. The PL spectra of the -NHBoc foldamer series show the typical emission features of anthracene derivatives with four vibronic bands (Fig. 3g). Overall, the observed PL bands are bathochromically shifted as the number of anthracene moieties in the oligomers increases, in line with the absorption measurements. When dimer-NHBoc was compared with A-NHBoc, using the 0-1 transition as a reference, a bathochromic shift (Δλ=1.0 nm) is clearly observed. The bathochromic shifts become increasingly larger in trimer-NHBoc (Δλ=1.5 nm), tetramer-NHBoc (Δλ=2 nm) and pentamer-NHBoc (Δλ=6.0 nm). These energy changes are coupled to a change on the relative intensity of the 0-2 and 0-3 transitions that increase together with the number of anthracene moieties in the oligomer. Such increase of the relative intensity is due to an underlying transition that corresponds to the anthracene excimer (500 nm)56. The presence of the anthracene excimer in the PL spectra evidences the face-to-face overlap between anthracenes in solution. Most importantly, almost invariable changes were observed in the PL spectra on dilution (from 10−5 to 10−7 M), which also supports the intramolecular nature of the interactions between anthracenes.

To obtain a much clearer view of the folding process, conformation-specific vibrational spectroscopic studies in the gas phase were carried out as they allow elucidating the intrinsic structures of moderately large molecules (typically <500–600 Da) without the interferences of packing or solvation. Remarkably, dimer-NHBoc (984.33 Da) and trimer-NHBoc (1,532.10 Da) could be studied even if they roughly duplicate and triplicate, respectively, the typical molecular weight for this kind of measurements57,58. The full experimental description is given in Supplementary Information. In brief, an infrared laser pulse (1,064 nm) was used to transfer the intact foldamer molecules from solid state to gas phase. Then, the target vapourized sample was diluted and expanded in an argon jet and skimmed to generate a cold collimated beam. In the extraction and acceleration regions of the linear TOF, an ultraviolet dye laser ionized the foldamers through a resonant two-photon ultraviolet excitation (34,000 cm−1). Conformation-selective spectra could be obtained from a third tunable optical parametric oscillator/optical parametric amplifier infrared laser through infrared ion dip spectroscopy. The conformationally specific vibrational spectra could be interrogated in the C–H and N–H stretch regions, which are extremely sensitive to the local hydrogen-bonded conformational environment. The infrared experimental spectra of dimer-NHBoc and trimer NH-Boc are very similar (Fig. 3h,i) with a set of bands in the 2,850–3,100 cm−1 region, which correspond to the C–H stretch vibrational modes. With regard to N–H modes, the experimental band about 3,430 cm−1 corresponds to the symmetric and antisymmetric coupled modes of the amide nitrogens. The presence of a single red-shifted band points out that the amide nitrogens are equivalent and that they are weakly hydrogen bonded to the nitrogen atoms of pyridine rings. A second set of N–H bands should be observed, which would correspond to the carbamate nitrogens. However, these modes are not observed in the experimental spectra. This is not strange since these atoms are not forming hydrogen bonds and hence, these bands should be weaker. The spectra of several minimized conformers of dimer-NHBoc and trimer-NHBoc were calculated and compared with the experimental spectra to assign the intrinsic folded conformations. To ensure that the assignment is correct, the spectra were calculated from the minimized structure dimer-NHBoc and trimer-NHBoc exhibiting TIPS groups. The good agreement between experimental and calculated spectra (Fig. 3h,i) illustrates that the foldamers adopt a ππ conformation between the anthracene moieties (see below). The simulated spectrum for the alternative CH–π conformation for dimer-NHBoc does not fit with the experimental data confirming univocally that the observed conformation is ππ (Supplementary Fig. 1). In the case of trimer-NHBoc the simulations of the ππ and the CH–π conformers are similar and both could account for the experimental spectrum (Supplementary Fig. 2). However, the higher correlation of the simulated ππ conformer with the experimental spectrum, the clear observation of the ππ conformation for dimer-NHBoc and the larger stability found for the ππ conformers from modelling (see below) indicate a preferential ππ conformation for trimer-NHBoc, as well.

Overall, from the combination of all different characterization techniques, we can safely conclude that the foldamers adopt a folded conformation in the solid state, in solution and in the gas phase. X-ray crystallography of trimer-NHBoc shows a folded structure in the solid state even in the presence of two crystallization DMSO molecules that impose a CH–π conformation (Fig. 3a). NMR, ultraviolet–visible absorption and PL measurements in solution (Fig. 3c–g) show the close proximity of the anthracene moieties (shielding of the NMR anthracene signals) and an intramolecular electronic interaction among them (batochromically shifted absorption and emission features) that gives rise to a complex intramolecular dynamic equilibrium between different ππ and CH–π conformers (a single diffusing DOSY signal for the foldamers and also denaturation of the foldamer at high temperature observed in VT-NMR, with a preferential ππ conformation as the number of anthracenes increases (anthracene excimer emission evidencing a face-to-face overlap between anthracenes). Conformation-specific vibrational spectroscopic studies confirm a more favourable ππ conformation for dimer-NHBoc and trimer-NHBoc in the gas phase (Fig. 3h,i).

Theoretical calculations were carried out to provide a detailed picture of the fundamental interactions determining the energetics and structure of the folded molecules (Fig. 4a). The TIPS groups have a marginal effect on the geometrical and electronic structure and were omitted. The effect of the (implicit) solvent was modelled and was found to have a negligible effect on the geometries of dimer-NH2 and therefore was not used in the geometry optimizations. On the basis of the spectroscopic and X-ray data described above two different types of folded conformations were explored: CH–π and ππ. On one hand, the CH–π conformations were based on the crystal structure of trimer-NHBoc using partial optimizations at the B3LYP/6-31 g(d,p) level in which only the amines and hydrogens were allowed to relax, as full optimizations lead to ππ structures. Trimer-NHBoc crystallizes in a CH–π conformation yet, when the co-crystallizing solvent molecules were removed and the structure was optimized in vacuum, it changed into a ππ structure, which indicates that interconversion between CH–π and ππ folded structures is energetically feasible. On the other hand, classical molecular dynamics simulations were run followed by optimizations at the BLYP/def2-TZP-D3BJ level to obtain the ππ conformers studied (see Supplementary Information for full details). Overall, density functional theory molecular mechanics and semi-empirical models are found to favour compact ππ conformations, in line with our experimental observations. The first CH–π stabilized structure of dimer-NH2, which also shows the highest CH–π character of the whole foldamer series, is predicted to be 2.1 kcal mol−1 above the lowest lying ππ conformer. The distance between stacked anthracenes for the ππ dimer-NH2 is 3.26 Å. The structures of trimer-NH2, tetramer-NH2 and pentamer-NH2 are substantially more complex. As a matter of fact, the computed structures confirm that the foldamers are held together by a continuous interplay of aromatic interactions between anthracene units, consistent with the VT-NMR and DOSY experiments that confirm a complex conformational equilibrium.

Figure 4: Computed structure of the foldamers.
figure 4

(a) Representative CH–π and ππ structures for the different foldamers. (b) HOMO and LUMO orbitals for CH–π and ππ conformers of pentamer-NH2.

We computed the electronic structure of CH–π and ππ conformations at the B3LYP/6-311+g(2d,p) level surrounded by implicit solvent (Fig. 4b). The electronic structure of the frontier orbitals for the four foldamers is qualitatively similar for the ππ and the CH–π series. The HOMO orbitals for all foldamers have consistently large densities on anthracene moieties, while the LUMO orbitals have often, but not exclusively, larger densities on the pyridine-2,6-dicarboxamide residues (Fig. 4b and Supplementary Figs 3–6). In addition, in all studied cases, the terminal amines are electronically coupled to the terminal anthracenes in the HOMO orbitals. In the case of the CH–π conformers, the anthracene units are electronically decoupled at the HOMO level. In contrast, the ππ conformers, due to the stacking conformations, show HOMO orbitals with densities that spread over more than one anthracene moiety. Furthermore, in all foldamers, the CH–π and ππ conformations show nearly degenerate occupied orbitals for each anthracene unit with energies from −5.3 to −5.6 eV (Supplementary Table 1). In particular, the HOMO degeneracy of the ππ conformers extends to the HOMO–1 (dimer-NH2, trimer-NH2, tetramer-NH2 and pentamer-NH2), HOMO–2 (trimer-NH2, tetramer-NH2 and pentamer-NH2), HOMO–3 (tetramer-NH2 and pentamer-NH2) and HOMO–4 (pentamer-NH2 only), and in most cases with densities that spread over more than one anthracene moiety (Supplementary Figs 5–7). All foldamers also share very similar ionization potentials ranging from –5.3 to –5.4 eV. A comparison of the HOMO and HOMO–1 for the CH–π and ππ conformers in the simplest foldamer, dimer-NH2, illustrates the differences between conformers (Supplementary Fig. 7). For the ππ conformer, there is an electronic density path linking the terminal amines and both anthracene moieties in the HOMO and HOMO–1. Furthermore, for this conformer both molecular orbitals present very similar electron densities and energies (110 meV). In contrast, for the CH–π conformer, the HOMO and the HOMO–1 orbitals show localized electron densities on different anthracenes and a slightly larger energy difference (190 meV). Overall, the ππ and CH–π conformers for the whole foldamer series exhibit degenerate occupied frontier orbitals with large electron density on the anthracene moieties and with ionization potentials which are closely aligned to the Fermi energy of gold (−5.5 eV). This provides a viable pathway for charge transport across the molecule through the anthracene moieties.

Single-molecule charge transport studies

Single-molecule charge transport characterization of each oligomer was carried out in single-molecule junctions using the STM-BJ technique50,51. The experiments were conducted in TCE at very low concentrations (<10−9 M) to ensure an efficient anchoring of individual molecules between the electrodes and to avoid any aggregation in solution. Briefly, the STM-BJ is based on driving a Au STM tip in and out of contact to/from a Au(111) substrate functionalized with the target foldamer. During the contact process, individual oligomers can spontaneously bridge between both biased (few mV) electrodes via the two -NH2 terminal groups (Fig. 1, bottom). The current is then recorded for each pulling stage in the form of current versus time/displacement (Fig. 5a), and the traces displaying molecular plateau features below the quantum conductance (G0=2e2h−1) were used to build the conductance histograms (Fig. 5b). The observed maxima in the histograms represent the most probable conductance values for the formed single-molecule contact (see Supplementary Information for details). The most intense (higher counting) conductance peak, which corresponds to the most probable molecular junction configuration, shows very large conductance values in the range of 10−1 G0 for all foldamers: 0.215 G0 for dimer-NH2; 0.195 G0 for trimer-NH2; 0.178 G0 for tetramer-NH2; and 0.168 G0 for pentamer-NH2. Such high conductance values decrease exponentially with an increasing number of anthracenes in the molecular backbone. By fitting the conductance data to a simple tunnelling transport regime, G=Ae−ßL, and using the distance between π-stacked anthracenes estimated from the simulations (3.26 Å), a very low length decay constant ß=0.02 Å−1 is obtained (Fig. 4c).

Figure 5: Single-molecule conductance measurements.
figure 5

(a) Individual pulling traces and (b) conductance histograms of the different foldamers. All conductance values were extracted from Gaussian fits. (c) Calculated ß value for the ππ foldamers. Error bars capture the variability in peak position. (d) Conductance histograms for #-trimer-NH2. (e) Structure of #-trimer-NH2. (f) Conductance histograms for the pentamer-NH2 at variable temperatures. (g) Arrhenius plot of the single-molecule conductance for the pentamer-NH2. Error bars represent the s.d. of the experimental conductance values extracted from the full width at half maximum of the Gaussian fits. Applied voltage bias were 5 mV for the trimer-NH2–pentamer-NH2 series and 50 mV for dimer-NH2.

To experimentally confirm that charge transport takes place preferentially through the interacting anthracene moieties, a truncated trimer (#-trimer-NH2) was synthesized, in which the central anthracene ring has been substituted by a non-aromatic cyclohexane ring (Fig. 5d,e). Conductance histograms for #-trimer-NH2 showed that the highest conductance peak (0.017 G0) is one order of magnitude smaller than the corresponding conductance observed for the homologous trimer-NH2 (0.195 G0). This substantial conductance drop can be ascribed to the interrupted conduction channel because of the lack of an anthracene moiety in #-trimer-NH2 that interferes with charge transport. Consequently, the high conductance values observed are undoubtedly owed to the presence of a charge transport channel across the interacting anthracene units.

To validate the above proposed tunnelling charge transport mechanism in the studied single-molecule junctions, we have measured temperature-dependent single-molecule conductance for the longer pentamer-NH2 moiety (Fig. 5f,g). To avoid any possible unfolding, we covered a temperature range below room temperature from 6 to 25 °C. The invariance of the single-molecule conductance versus temperature around the working room temperature for the longer backbone (Fig. 5g) supports a tunnelling transport regime throughout all the conductance series in Fig. 5b,d. It is worth noticing in Fig. 5g that while the conductance dispersion (represented as error bars) is fairly similar within the studied temperature range, the single-molecule experimental yield (defined as the percentage of current traces displaying single-molecule events or plateaus over the total collected traces) drops down by a factor of four from the lowest to the highest working temperature, which results in the observed counts decrease in Fig. 5f histogram peaks from top to bottom. This behaviour has been observed before in single-molecule transport studies59 and is ascribed to thermal instabilities at the molecule/electrode contact as the temperature is raised.

Overall, the conductance measurements carried out point towards a coherent tunnelling charge transport process across the anthracene units as supported by the presence of a charge transport channel across the interacting anthracene units—this is consistent with the calculated electronic structure and evidenced by the conductance drop observed when comparing trimer-NH2 and #-trimer-NH2 (Fig. 5b,d)—and by the invariance of the single-molecule conductance versus temperature (Fig. 5g), which supports a tunnelling transport regime.

The molecule–electrodes electronic coupling strength (Γ) has been estimated from a single-channel resonant tunnelling model60,61 yielding values between 50 and 60 meV from pentamer-NH2 to dimer-NH2 (Supplementary Note 2). Even if such values support the observed coherent tunnelling behaviour60, they cannot be used to confirm whether charge transport is resonant, but nevertheless, they point out to a high coupling scenario62.

Discussion

We have reported a series of synthetic oligomers consisting of an increasing number of anthracene moieties that fold by a combination of hydrogen bonds and aromatic interactions as demonstrated by a series of studies in the solid, liquid and gas phases, and by theoretical calculations. Remarkably, such folding process opens up an efficient through-space charge transport channel across the interacting anthracene moieties that has been confirmed both theoretically and experimentally. First, the computed electronic structure of the frontier orbitals of the foldamer series illustrates the degeneracy of anthracene occupied frontier orbitals, which provides a viable pathway for charge transport across the anthracene moieties. Second, charge transport studies at the single-molecule level show exceptionally high conductance values in the range of 10−1 G0 for all foldamers and a low length decay constant of 0.02 Å−1. Third, comparative conductance studies carried out with #-trimer-NH2, in which the central anthracene ring has been substituted by a non-aromatic cyclohexane ring, reveal conductance values one order of magnitude smaller than the homologous trimer-NH2, confirming that charge transport takes place preferentially through the channel constituted by the interacting anthracene moieties. While a complete picture of the transport mechanism at play is still to be determined, the invariance of the single-molecule conductance versus temperature supports a tunnelling transport regime. Overall, this work illustrates that carefully designed foldamers provide a new and efficient means for charge transport at the single-molecule level and also new application perspectives for foldamers.

Methods

Synthesis and structural characterization

All commercially available reagents and solvents were used without further purification. Anhydrous tetrahydrofuran (THF) and toluene were dried through a SPS solvent purification system. All reactions of the compounds were carried out under a nitrogen atmosphere and oven-dried glassware. Column chromatography was carried out using Silica gel 60 (40–60 μm; 230–400 mesh) from VWR. Thin layer chromatography was performed to follow the reaction process by using sheets (20 × 20) of aluminium pre-coated with Silica gel 60 F254 from Merck. Ultraviolet-active compounds were detected with an ultraviolet lamp from CAMAG at wavelength λ=254 or 366 nm. 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR spectra were recorded on Bruker Avance 400 or 500 spectrometer at 298 K using partially deuterated solvents as internal references. Chemical shifts are reported in (δ) parts per million and referred to the residual solvent peak. DOSY and VT-NMR measurements were performed at the NMR General Services of the University of the Basque Country by Dr José Ignacio Miranda. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (coupled to a TOF analyser) experiments were recorded on Bruker REFLEX spectrometer at POLYMAT by Dr Antonio Veloso. X-ray diffraction measurements were performed at the X-ray diffraction unit of the General Services of the University of the Basque Country by Dr Leire San Felices. Intensity data were collected on an Agilent Technologies Super-Nova diffractometer, which was equipped with monochromated Cu kα radiation (λ=1.54184 Å) and Atlas charge-coupled device detector. Measurement was carried out at 150.00(10) K with the help of an Oxford Cryostream 700 PLUS temperature device. Data frames were processed (united cell determination, analytical absorption correction with face indexing, intensity data integration and correction for Lorentz and polarization effects) using the Crysalis software package. The structure was solved using Olex2 and refined by full-matrix least-squares with SHELXL-97. Final geometrical calculations were carried out with Mercury and PLATON as integrated in WinGX.

Foldamer handling

The -NHBoc and -NH2 foldamer series are sensitive to oxygen and light and decompose in solution to the corresponding anthracene endoperoxides in about 24 h. All anthracene-containing compounds were characterized from fresh samples in a light-free environment. In the case the experiments required more than 2 h they were carried out in a nitrogen- and light-free environment (either under an nitrogen stream, using airtight glassware or handled in a glovebox).

Optical characterization

Absorption and PL spectra were recorded on a Perkin-Elmer Lambda 950 spectrometer and a LS55 Perkin-Elmer Fluorescence spectrometer, respectively, at 298 K.

Infrared ion dip spectroscopy

Approximately 40 mg of foldamer (dimer-NHBoc or trimer-NHBoc) were used in the experiments. The sample was mixed with nanotubes and deposited on a graphite cylindrical rod (15 mm long and 4 mm diameter). A stepper motor rotated and translated the sample. So, the infrared pulses (1,064 nm, 8 ns) from a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser found fresh sample. A full description of technique is described here63. The foldamers exhibit broad absorption electronic spectra due to several chromophore anthracene groups. The infrared spectra were recorded at 34,343 and 34,013 cm−1 for dimer-NHBoc and trimer-NHBoc, respectively. Finally, the experimental infrared spectra were compared with theoretical spectra. The frequencies of the NH and CH stretch modes, expressed in wavenumbers, were corrected for anharmonicity using the multipliers, 0.995 and 0.98, respectively.

Computer modelling

We studied different conformers for the dimer-NH2 and trimer-NH2 foldamers. The TIPS groups have a marginal effect on the geometric and electronic structure of these systems and were omitted for computational efficiency. To generate the starting structures, we first performed molecular dynamics simulations at 298 K with the molecular mechanics MMFF94 force field as implemented in the software Tinker. Collisions with solvent molecules were considered implicitly through the use of stochastic dynamics with a friction coefficient of 2 ps to improve conformational sampling. Simulations were run for 10 ns and snapshots of the trajectory were selected at 50 ps intervals yielding 200 different conformations, which were optimized at MMFF94 level and at the PM6-D3H4 level64. The so-obtained geometries were filtered by an algorithm explicitly considering topological symmetry with a root mean squared deviation cut-off of 0.5 Å (ref. 65). The unique conformations were subsequently minimized at the BLYP/def2-SVP-D3BJ (also used for infrared spectra simulations) and BLYP/def2-TZVP-D3BJ (geometries and total energies) levels66 within the RI approximation with the programme Orca 3.03 (ref. 67). The effect of the (implicit) solvent was modelled with the programme Gaussian 09 (ref. 68) and found to have a negligible effect on the geometries of the dimer-NH2 and was not used in the geometry optimizations. The aforementioned procedure produces prevalently conformers with ππ stacked anthracenes. The lowest energy minimum for the dimer-NH2 and the minima presenting the largest contact between anthracene moieties in the trimer were selected as representative for the ππ conformations. The pentamer-NH2 ππ conformation was produced by fusing two trimer-NH2 molecules followed by optimization, while the ππ tetramer-NH2 was obtained by cutting out one monomer from the pentamer-NH2 followed by optimization. CH–π conformers were derived from the trimer-NHBoc crystalline structure by, first, substituting the NHBoc groups by amine groups and, second, using partial optimizations at the B3LYP/6-31g(d,p) levels where only the amines and hydrogen atoms were allowed to relax. This was necessary as full optimizations favour ππ stacked structures. The CH–π pentamer-NH2 was built by fusing two CH–π trimer-NH2 molecules, but in this case only the central CH2–antracene–CH2 unit was optimized. The CH–π tetramer-NH2 was obtained cutting out one monomer from the pentamer. The electronic structure for neutral and charged foldamers was computed at the B3LYP/6-311+g(2d,p) level, as with this Hamiltonian HOMO and LUMOs eigenvalues are similar to the adiabatic ionization potential and electron affinity of conjugated molecules in low-polarity solvents69. The adiabatic ionization potential and electron affinity were explicitly computed for all foldamers and match the HOMO and LUMOs eigenvalues for these systems.

STM break junction

Foldamer-NH2 TFA salt was dissolved in MeOH (saturated) and the free amine was precipitated by addition of triethylamine (TEA), the solid was collected by centrifugation and was washed with MeOH/TEA 20:1 and twice with MeOH and finally vacuum-dried until constant weight. All the conductance measurements were carried out in the dark in anaerobic conditions with a mechanically and electronically isolated PicoSPM I microscope head controlled by a Picoscan 2500 electronics (all from Agilent) and using a homemade PTFE STM cell. Data captures were acquired using a NI-DAQmx/BNC-2110 National Instruments (LabVIEW data acquisition System) and analysed with LabVIEW code. The procedure of a typical break-junction experiment is based on bringing the STM tip to tunnelling distance over a flat clean Au (111) surface area as a first step. The STM feedback is then turned off and the tip is driven into and out of contact with the substrate at a speed of 1–2 V s−1. These two-point feedback loop is used to collect thousands of current decays (5,000–6,000). Single-molecule conductance (G) was determined using the expression G=Istep/UBIAS, where I is the current and U is the voltage difference between the two junction electrodes. The current decays are accumulated to semi-logarithmic conductance histograms. The observed plateaus in the individual current decays result in the observed peaks in the conductance histograms and provide an averaged value of the single-molecule conductance. Transient curves that are either noisy or that showed smooth exponential decay because of the absence of molecular bridge formation were rejected when building the histograms using an automatic selection procedure driven by a code written in LabVIEW. The histograms were compiled by applying the same automated selection criteria to each set of the recorded decay curves. The selection procedure allows current traces showing counts exceeding a defined threshold to be added to the conductance histogram. The percentage decay curves that showed clear molecular steps were typically 8–15% and were all selected for building the histograms. This selection process made peaks in the conductance histograms more prominent above the tunnelling background and also allowed a quantitative measure of the yield of molecular junction formation.

Data availability

Full details on the synthesis and characterization of the foldamers and additional details regarding infrared ion dip spectroscopy, computer modelling and STM break junction are given in the Supplementary Information. Crystallographic data for trimer-NHBoc are deposited with the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre under reference number CCDC-1542042.

Additional information

How to cite this article: Carini, M. et al. High conductance values in π-folded molecular junctions. Nat. Commun. 8, 15195 doi: 10.1038/ncomms15195 (2017).

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