Super-Robust Xanthine-Sodium Complexes on Au(111).
Chong ChenPengcheng C DingZhuo LiGuoqiang Q ShiYe SunLev N KantorovichFlemming BesenbacherMiao YuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
A widely accepted theory is that life originated from the hydrothermal environment in the primordial ocean. Nevertheless, the low desorption temperature from inorganic substrates and the fragileness of hydrogen-bonded nucleobases do not support the required thermal stability in such an environment. Herein, we report the super-robust complexes of xanthine, one of the precursors for the primitive nucleic acids, with Na. We demonstrate that the well-defined xanthine-Na complexes can only form when the temperature is ≥430 K, and the complexes keep adsorbed even at ≈720 K, presenting as the most thermally stable organic polymer ever reported on Au(111). This work not only justifies the necessity of high-temperature, Na-rich environment for the prebiotic biosynthesis but also reveals the robustness of the xanthine-Na complexes upon the harsh environment. Moreover, the complexes can induce significant electron transfer with the metal as inert as Au and hence lift the Au atoms up.