Does Selectivity of Molecular Catalysts Change with Time? Polymerization Imaged by Single-Molecule Spectroscopy.
Antonio GarciaShannon J SalugaDavid J DibblePía A LópezNozomi SaitoSuzanne A BlumPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
The chemoselectivity of molecular catalysts underpins much of modern synthetic organic chemistry. However, little is known about the selectivity of individual catalysts because this single-catalyst-level behavior is hidden by the bulk catalytic behavior. Here, for the first time, the selectivity of individual molecular catalysts for two different reactions is imaged in real time at the single-catalyst level. This imaging is achieved through fluorescence microscopy paired with spectral probes that produce a snapshot of the instantaneous chemoselectivity of a single catalyst for either a single-chain-elongation or a single-chain-termination event during ruthenium-catalyzed polymerization. Superresolution imaging of multiple selectivity events, each at a different single-molecular ruthenium catalyst, indicates that catalyst selectivity may be unexpectedly spatially and time-variable.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- highly efficient
- metal organic framework
- room temperature
- living cells
- ionic liquid
- atomic force microscopy
- reduced graphene oxide
- high resolution
- carbon dioxide
- visible light
- transition metal
- structural basis
- optical coherence tomography
- mass spectrometry
- quantum dots
- photodynamic therapy
- nucleic acid