David N. Reinhoudt
MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology
1082 Papers
20.9K Citations
David N. Reinhoudt is an academic researcher from MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Membrane. The author has an hindex of 107, co-authored 1082 publications. Previous affiliations of David N. Reinhoudt include University of Modena and Reggio Emilia & University of Mainz.
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Papers
Highly ordered films of neat calix[4]arenes for second order nonlinear optics
E. Kelderman,G.J.T. Heesink,L. Derhaeg,Thierry Verbiest,Piet T. A. Klaase,Willem Verboom,Johan F.J. Engbersen,Niek F. van Hulst,Koen Clays,André Persoons,David N. Reinhoudt +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the molecular and thin-film properties of three tetra-D-pi-A-substituted calix[4]arenes, including their orientation in thin films and the stability of their NLO properties, are described.
The Transduction of Host‐Guest Interactions into Electronic Signals by Molecular Systems
Abstract: Synthetic receptor molecules that selectively bind charged guests can store chemical information. The transduction of this information into electronic signals connects the chemical and electronic domains. Field effect transistors (FETs) are attractive transducing elements because these microdevices are able to register and amplify chemical changes at the gate oxide surface of the semiconductor chip.
Integration of molecular receptors and field effect transistors into one chemical system gives a device that can communicate-changes of substrate activities in aqueous solution. Simulations of a system in which the receptor molecules are directly attached to the FET gate oxide indicate serious limitations with respect to sensitivity, dynamic range and extreme requirements for complex stability. Therefore we have concentrated on the integration of covalently attached thin membranes.
The problem of the thermodynamically ill-defined oxidemembrane ipterface has been solved by applying a covalently linked hydrophilic polyhydroxyethylmethacrylate (polyHEMA) gel between the sensing membrane and the silylated gate oxide. A buffered aqueous electrolyte solution in the hydrogel renders the surface potential at the gate oxide constant via the dissociation equilibrium of the residual silanol groups. The subsequent attachment of a polysiloxane membrane that has the required dielectric constant, glass transition temperature Tg, and receptor molecule, provides a stable chemical system that transduces the complexation of cationic species into electronic signals (CHEMFET).
The response to changing K concentrations in a solution of 0.1 M NaCl is fast (<1 sec) and linear in the concentration range of 10-5-1.0 M (55-58 mV /decade). A reference FET (REFET) based on the same technology is obtained when the intrinsic sensitivity to changes in ion concentration is eliminated by the addition of 2.10-5 mol g-1 of didodecyldimethyl ammonium bromide to the ACE membrane. Differential measurements with a REFET/CHEMFET combination showed excellent linear K response over long periods of time.
All chemical reactions used are compatible with planar IC technology and allow fabrication on wafer scale.
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Chemically modified field-effect transistors - potentiometric ag+ selectivity of pvc membranes based on macrocyclic thioethers
Zbigniew Brzozka,P.L.H.M. Cobben,David N. Reinhoudt,J. J. H. Edema,J. Buter,Richard M. Kellogg +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a chemically modified field effect transistor (CHEMFET) with satisfactory Ag+ selectivity was described, and the potentiometric Ag + selectivities of CHEM-FETs with plasticized PVC membranes based on macrocyclic thioethers were determined.
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Organogel or polymer gel; facilitated gelation of a sugar-based organic gel by the addition of a boronic acid-appended polymer
Hideki Kobayashi,Masato Amaike,Jong Hwa Jung,Arianna Friggeri,Seiji Shinkai,David N. Reinhoudt +5 more
TL;DR: The combination of boronic acid-appended poly(L-lysine) 1 and sugar-based gelator 2 yields a novel organo-polymer gel, consisting of vesicles held together by polymer molecules.
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Free‐Standing 3 D Supramolecular Hybrid Particle Structures
Xing Yi Ling,In Yee Phang,Wouter Maijenburg,Holger Schönherr,Holger Schönherr,David N. Reinhoudt,G. Julius Vancso,Jurriaan Huskens +7 more
TL;DR: The formation of stable and ordered free-standing particle bridges and hollow capsule structures with controllable sizes and geometries is demonstrated by combining the directed assembly of submicrometer particles, transfer printing, and supramolecular layer-by-layer assembly.
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