Impact of Rigidity on Molecular Self-Assembly
Ella M. King, Matthew A. Gebbie, Nicholas A. Melosh

TL;DR
This study explores how molecular rigidity influences self-assembly, revealing that rigid molecules like diamondoids have lower entropic penalties, which facilitates their unique assembly pathways and potential for nanomaterial templating.
Contribution
It provides a molecular-level understanding of how rigidity affects entropic and enthalpic interactions during self-assembly, highlighting the role of entropy in the assembly of rigid molecules.
Findings
Diamondoids have lower entropic penalties compared to linear alkanes.
Linear alkanes exhibit stronger van der Waals interactions at contact.
Rigidity influences assembly by balancing enthalpic and entropic contributions.
Abstract
Rigid, cage-like molecules, like diamondoids, show unique self-assembly behavior, such as templating 1-D nanomaterial assembly via pathways that are typically blocked for such bulky substituents. We investigate molecular forces between diamondoids to explore why molecules with high structural rigidity exhibit these novel assembly pathways. The rigid nature of diamondoids significantly lowers configurational entropy, and we hypothesize that this influences molecular interaction forces. To test this concept, we calculated the distance-dependent impact of entropy on assembly using molecular dynamics simulations. To isolate pairwise entropic and enthalpic contributions to assembly, we considered pairs of molecules in a thermal bath, fixed at set intermolecular separations but otherwise allowed to freely move. By comparing diamondoids to linear alkanes, we draw out the impact of rigidity on…
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