Self-Assembled Hexa- <i>peri</i> -hexabenzocoronene Graphitic Nanotube

Jonathan P. Hill(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Wusong Jin(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Atsuko Kosaka(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Takanori Fukushima(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Hideki Ichihara(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Takeshi Shimomura(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Kohzo Ito(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Tomihiro Hashizume(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Noriyuki Ishii(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Takuzo Aida(Japan Science and Technology Agency)
Science
June 3, 2004
Cited by 1,047

Abstract

An amphiphilic hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene self-assembles to form a pi-electronic, discrete nanotubular object. The object is characterized by an aspect ratio greater than 1000 and has a uniform, 14-nanometer-wide, open-ended hollow space, which is an order of magnitude larger than those of carbon nanotubes. The wall is 3 nanometers thick and consists of helical arrays of the pi-stacked graphene molecule, whose exterior and interior surfaces are covered by hydrophilic triethylene glycol chains. The graphitic nanotube is redox active, and a single piece of the nanotube across 180-nanometer-gap electrodes shows, upon oxidation, an electrical resistance of 2.5 megohms at 285 kelvin [corrected]. This family of molecularly engineered graphite with a one-dimensional tubular shape and a chemically accessible surface constitutes an important step toward molecular electronics.


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