Login / Signup

Identification of Topotactic Surface-Confined Ullmann-Polymerization.

Dominik DettmannGianluca GaleottiOliver MacLeanMassimo TomelliniMarco Di GiovannantonioJosh Lipton-DuffinAlberto VerdiniLuca FloreanoYannick Fagot-RevuratDmitrii F PerepichkaFederico RoseiGiorgio Contini
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
On-surface Ullmann coupling is an established method for the synthesis of 1D and 2D organic structures. A key limitation to obtaining ordered polymers is the uncertainty in the final structure for coupling via random diffusion of reactants over the substrate, which leads to polymorphism and defects. Here, a topotactic polymerization on Cu(110) in a series of differently-halogenated para-phenylenes is identified, where the self-assembled organometallic (OM) reactants of diiodobenzene couple directly into a single, deterministic product, whereas the other precursors follow a diffusion driven reaction. The topotactic mechanism is the result of the structure of the iodine on Cu(110), which controls the orientation of the OM reactants and intermediates to be the same as the final polymer chains. Temperature-programmed X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and kinetic modeling reflect the differences in the polymerization regimes, and the effects of the OM chain alignments and halogens are disentangled by Nudged Elastic Band calculations. It is found that the repulsion or attraction between chains and halogens drive the polymerization to be either diffusive or topotactic. These results provide detailed insights into on-surface reaction mechanisms and prove the possibility of harnessing topotactic reactions in surface-confined Ullmann polymerization.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • big data
  • computed tomography
  • machine learning
  • magnetic resonance
  • single molecule
  • artificial intelligence
  • bioinformatics analysis