Sometimes the best discoveries come by accident. A team of researchers at Washington University in St. Louis, headed by Srikanth Singamaneni, PhD, assistant professor of mechanical engineering & materials science, unexpectedly found the
mechanism1 by which tiny single
molecules2 spontaneously grow into centimeter-long microtubes by leaving a dish for a different experiment in the refrigerator.
Once Singamaneni and his research team, including Abdennour Abbas, PhD, a former postdoctoral researcher at Washington University, Andrew Brimer, a senior undergraduate majoring in mechanical engineering, and Limei Tian, a fourth-year graduate student, saw that these molecules had become microtubes, they set out to find out how.
To do so, they spent about six months investigating the process at various length scales (nano to micro) using various microscopy(显微镜检查) and spectroscopy(光谱学) techniques.
The results were published in the journal Small.
"What we showed was that we can actually watch the self-assembly of small molecules across multiple length scales, and for the first time, stitched these length scales to show the complete picture," Singamaneni says. "This hierarchical self-organization of
molecular3 building blocks is
unprecedented4 since it is
initiated5 from a single molecular crystal and is driven by vesiclular
dynamics6 in water."
Self-assembly, a process in which a disordered collection of
components7 arrange themselves into an ordered structure, is of growing interest as a new
paradigm8 in creating micro- and nanoscale structures and
functional9 systems and subsystems. This novel approach of making nano- and microstructures and devices is expected to have numerous applications in electronics, optics and biomedical applications.
The team used small molecules p-aminothiophenol (p-ATP) or p-aminophenyl disulfide added to water with a small amount of
ethanol(乙醇). The molecules first assembled into nanovesicles then into microvesicles and eventually into centimeter-long microtubules. The vesicles stick onto the surface of the tube, walk along the surface and attach themselves, causing the tube to grow longer and wider. The entire process takes
mere10 seconds, with the growth rate of 20 microns per second.
"While it was exciting to watch the self-assembly of these molecules, we are even more excited about the implications of the self-assembly of such small molecules," Singamaneni says. "This mechanism can be used to load the vesicles with the desired macromolecules, such as proteins, antibodies or
antibiotics11, for example, and build microtubes with a biological function."
Singamaneni says his research team
collaborated12 with researchers in Singapore who are experts in molecular crystals, as well as with colleagues in the Department of Chemistry.
"We hope that once we can co-assemble some functional nanostructures along with these small molecules, then these molecular assemblies can have applications in biological
sensors13 and chemical sensors," Singamaneni says.
Funding for this research was provided by the U.S. Army Research Office and Army Research Laboratory.