Web Release Date: January 15,
Diffusion of Oriented Single Molecules with Switchable Mobility in Networks of Long Unidimensional Nanochannels






and

Department of Chemistry und Biochemistry and Center for Nanoscience (CeNS), Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Butenandtstrasse 11, D-81377 München, Germany, and Max Planck Institut für Polymerforschung, Mainz, Germany
Received August 20, 2007

Abstract:
Single dye molecules incorporated into a mesoporous matrix can act as highly sensitive reporters
of their environment. Here, we use single TDI molecules incorporated as guests into hexagonal mesoporous
films containing highly structured domains. The dye molecules allow us to map the size of these domains
which can extend to over 100
m. Investigation of the translational and orientational dynamics via single
molecule fluorescence techniques gives structural as well as dynamical information about the host material.
In an air atmosphere, the guest molecules show no movement but perfect orientation along the pore direction.
The diffusion of the TDI molecules can be induced by placing the mesoporous film in a saturated atmosphere
of chloroform. In single molecule measurements with very high positioning accuracy (down to 2-3 nm) the
movement of molecules could be observed even between neighboring channels. This reveals the presence
of defects like dead ends closing the pores or small openings in the silica walls between neighboring
channels, where molecules can change from one channel to the next. A statistical analysis demonstrates
that the diffusion of TDI in the mesoporous film cannot be described with a 1D-random diffusion but is
more complicated due to the presence of adsorption sites in which the TDI molecules can be occasionally
trapped.
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