Universal inter-molecular radical transfer reactions on metal surfaces.
Junbo WangKaifeng NiuHuaming ZhuChaojie XuChuan DengWenchao ZhaoPeipei HuangHaiping LinDengyuan LiJohanna RosenPei Nian LiuFrancesco AllegrettiJohannes V BarthBiao YangJonas BjörkQing LiLifeng ChiPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
On-surface synthesis provides tools to prepare low-dimensional supramolecular structures. Traditionally, reactive radicals are a class of single-electron species, serving as exceptional electron-withdrawing groups. On metal surfaces, however, such species are affected by conduction band screening effects that may even quench their unpaired electron characteristics. As a result, radicals are expected to be less active, and reactions catalyzed by surface-stabilized radicals are rarely reported. Herein, we describe a class of inter-molecular radical transfer reactions on metal surfaces. With the assistance of aryl halide precursors, the coupling of terminal alkynes is steered from non-dehydrogenated to dehydrogenated products, resulting in alkynyl-Ag-alkynyl bonds. Dehalogenated molecules are fully passivated by detached hydrogen atoms. The reaction mechanism is unraveled by various surface-sensitive technologies and density functional theory calculations. Moreover, we reveal the universality of this mechanism on metal surfaces. Our studies enrich the on-surface synthesis toolbox and develop a pathway for producing low-dimensional organic materials.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- electron transfer
- biofilm formation
- solar cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- room temperature
- high resolution
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- cystic fibrosis
- staphylococcus aureus
- quantum dots
- gene expression
- water soluble
- ionic liquid
- energy transfer