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Research

Research: Texto
Research: Texto

 Welcome to the Nanostructured Molecular Systems and Materials group at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.
Our research interests broadly aim at improving or creating new functions in organic materials by rationally ordering molecules at the nanoscale using the tools of self-assembly. We are focused on the development of new supramolecular strategies for the construction of complex molecular architectures with unprecedented structures, exciting physical and biological properties, and unconventional applications.
The biological world is a shining example and a source of inspiration when it comes to the organization of molecules. Nature has chosen the unlimited possibilities of self-assembly to precisely define the structure of molecules, organize them, and create a wide diversity of perfectly defined nanosystems having particular functions. The structure of viral capsids and cell membranes, the precise dye organization within photosynthetic reaction centers, the integration and disintegration dynamics of the microtubules forming the cell skeleton, or the polymorphism of DNA and proteins are just some representative examples.
The way molecules interact and communicate with their environment and the way they are organized into larger architectures, is by means of non-covalent or supramolecular interactions. Molecules can be "programmed" with chemical information in order to recognize and specifically associate to other molecules. The importance and complexity of these self-assembly processes represent a continuous inspiration to scientist in their quest for the engineering of complex functional nanostructures through a bioinspired "Bottom-Up" approach.
The group's research is thus centered in Molecular Engineering. We 1) design and 2) synthesize new functional molecules - from biologically relevant molecules to π-conjugated dyes -, 3) program them with specific supramolecular information - in order to guide their assembly into a given nanostructure -, and 4) study how the system properties relate to molecular structure and supramolecular architecture. In collaboration with several groups across chemistry, biology and physics disciplines, we are exploring unconventional and exciting applications of our nanostructured systems and materials in diverse multidisciplinary areas, such as organic optoelectronics, molecular recognition and catalysis, advanced materials, or biomedicine.

Hydrogen-bonded Multicomponent Nanoobjects

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Widely used by nature in defining the structure of biomolecules, hydrogen bonding is regarded as a powerful means to control supramolecular architecture, since it is a directional, selective and strength-tunable non-covalent interaction.
In our group, we want to profit from the attributes of this extraordinary interaction to selectively build different kinds of discrete nanoobjects. H-bonding directors (i.e. fragments having an array of H-bonding donor and acceptors groups), such as nucleoside derivatives, are strategically coupled to rigid blocks so as to guide their assembly into just one specific, well-defined structure. For the quantitative production of these (multi)cyclic assemblies, which are studied by a wide number of techniques including 1D and 2D NMR and optical spectroscopies, it is crucial to maximize intramolecular or chelate cooperativity in the system. 

In addition, different functional/switchable components can be introduced in these discrete nanoobjects that can cooperate to endow the assembly with specific properties.

Research: Investigación

Hierarchically assembled Nanoporous 2D Networks and 3D Frameworks

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We pursue the synthesis of systems and materials by supramolecular polymerization, that is, a polymerization process where the monomeric repeat units are held together by noncovalent bonds, such as metal-ligand coordination, π-π stacking, dipolar, or H-bonding interactions. The design of the self-assembling building blocks and the control of the interplay between multiple non-covalent interactions will define the dimensionality of such systems. 
1D Nanofibers or nanowires made of stacked functional π-conjugated molecules in which we will try to rule stack length and composition.
2D Networks grown onto metal or graphitic surfaces with well-defined nanocavities, where we try to control molecular positioning and to recognize and host specific molecules as a function of their size, shape and chemical structure.
3D Frameworks that are built by combination of different reversible non-covalent or covalent reactions and that present ordered, custom-tailored nanochannels. These systems may find application as catalysts or nanomembranes for advanced separation technologies.

Research: Investigación

Self-assembled Nanotubes with Custom-tailored Pores

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We aim to understand the fundamentals of chemical self-assembly and contribute to the development of the full potential of noncovalent synthesis to prepare, in a bioinspired manner, complex functional architectures. One of our objectives is to establish unconventional and versatile strategies towards self-assembled nanotubes whose size, composition, internal structure, and function can be rationally predesigned and controlled at the nanoscale. In a first stage, specific cyclic entities are formed by H-bonding interactions. These discrete macrocycles then stack through nucleation-growth polymerizations into highly ordered tubular nanostructures guided by the cooperative action of parallel directors. The combination of computational chemistry and diverse spectroscopy and microscopy techniques will allow us to study the thermodynamics, kinetics and mechanistic pathways of the different supramolecular processes intervening in nanotube assembly, both in water and in organic solvents. 
Furthermore, our goal is to do chemistry within these chiral confined nanospaces. As a matter of fact, we can regulate the diameter and chemical coating of the tubes’ pore, so as to selectively host diverse guest molecules as a function of their size and chemical affinity.

A Marie SkÅ‚odowska-Curie Intraeuropean Fellowship was awarded to Dr. Fátima Aparicio on this research line: Self-assembled Tubular Nanostructures with Functional Pores (Nanospace-793506) 
https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/793506 

Research: Investigación

DNA- and Nucleoside-based Self-assembled Systems

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DNA is a biopolymer with predictable and programmable interactions that can be used as a versatile self-assembling building block in nanotechnology for a wide range of potential applications: highly specific sensors, cell-surface engineering, molecular computing, etc. In one of our research lines within this topic we plan to radically alter DNA self-assembly at the deepest level: the interaction between bases. Using properly designed nucleobase chemical modifications, a DNA quadruplex structure, having a cyclic section and a chiral, tunable inner pore, spontaneously evolves from the programmed self-recognition of 4 oligonucleotide strands. These well-defined DNA-based nanoobjects may offer a huge number of applied possibilities, like their use as nanocontainers for drug delivery or transmembrane channel mimics. Additionally, the group is investigating the use of DNA single strands to guide the stacking of π-conjugated molecules via a template effect. In this way, the group expects to have a fine control on the polydispersity, length and sequence of the stacks.
In a related research line, we have been studying the self-assembly of guanosine derivatives into G-quadruplexes, which constitute a remarkable example of self-assembled, discrete nanoobjects. These assemblies comprise H-bonded cyclic tetramers (G-quartets) that can incorporate size-matching metal cations by coordination to the carbonyl groups between π-π stacked quartets. We and other research groups have considered G-quadruplexes as ideal scaffolds to which functional organic molecules can be attached to build well-defined nanoclusters that are endowed with physical properties markedly different from their molecular constituents.

Research: Investigación
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π-Functional Nanostructured Systems and Materials

The supramolecular synthesis of systems and materials in which the morphology and the relative arrangement of individual π-conjugated molecules can be controlled is a challenging objective that requires scientific attention, so that function and optoelectronic properties can be related to well-defined nanostructures with a designed molecular organization. In collaboration with different groups, a central project in this line focuses on the organization of cone-shaped π-conjugated molecules with axial dipolar moment into non-centrosymmetric columnar nanostructures and liquid crystalline materials, which present switchable (i.e. ferroelectric) or permanent polarization that can be coupled to charge transport. Other current objectives that are under development combine noncovalent strategies and methods from the above-mentioned topics that employ nucleobase derivatives as supramolecular directors to control the self-assembly of p- and n-type semiconductors. Achieving a rational, controlled molecular organization at the nanoscale may help us to understand charge separation and exciton/charge migration phenomena in order to optimize the performance of optoelectronic devices, such as organic solar cells.

A Marie SkÅ‚odowska-Curie Intraeuropean Fellowship was awarded to Dr. Alberto de Juan on this research line:  Nanostructured Supramolecular Polymers with Allosterically Regulated Catalytic Interstices (SuprAlloCat-897507)
https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/897507

 

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Smart Polymers

A more recent research line directly applies some of the supramolecular concepts and tools developed in the group to polymeric materials. One of the projects in this line ultimately targets the preparation of adhesive polymer coatings where bonding occurs under a pressure-sensitive contact mechanism between two complementary surfaces, thus chemically mimicking the operation of materials like magnets or Velcro®. A second project targets the generation of polymer networks that combine mechanical toughness and self-healing properties.

Research: Investigación
Research: Investigación
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