Enhancing Haloarene Coupling Reaction Efficiency on an Oxide Surface by Metal Atom Addition.
Mikel AbadiaIgnacio Piquero-ZulaicaJens BredeAlberto VerdiniLuca FloreanoJohannes V BarthJorge Lobo-ChecaMartina CorsoCelia RogeroPublished in: Nano letters (2024)
The bottom-up synthesis of carbon-based nanomaterials directly on semiconductor surfaces allows for the decoupling of their electronic and magnetic properties from the substrates. However, the typically reduced reactivity of such nonmetallic surfaces adversely affects the course of these reactions. Here, we achieve a high polymerization yield of halogenated polyphenyl molecular building blocks on the semiconducting TiO 2 (110) surface via concomitant surface decoration with cobalt atoms, which catalyze the Ullmann coupling reaction. Specifically, cobalt atoms trigger the debromination of 4,4″-dibromo- p -terphenyl molecules on TiO 2 (110) and mediate the formation of an intermediate organometallic phase already at room temperature (RT). As the debromination temperature is drastically reduced, homocoupling and polymerization readily proceed, preventing presursor desorption from the substrate and entailing a drastic increase of the poly- para -phenylene polymerization yield. The general efficacy of this mechanism is shown with an iodinated terphenyl derivative, which exhibits similar dehalogenation and reaction yield.