Quantum Tunneling Mediated Interfacial Synthesis of a Benzofuran Derivative.
Tobias PaintnerJonas BjörkPing DuSvetlana KlyatskayaMateusz PaszkiewiczRaphael HellwigMartin UphoffMurat A ÖnerEdoardo CunibertoPeter S DeimelYi-Qi ZhangCarlos-Andres PalmaFrancesco AllegrettiManfred M KappesJohannes V BarthFlorian KlappenbergerPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Reaction pathways involving quantum tunneling of protons are fundamental to chemistry and biology. They are responsible for essential aspects of interstellar synthesis, the degradation and isomerization of compounds, enzymatic activity, and protein dynamics. On-surface conditions have been demonstrated to open alternative routes for organic synthesis, often with intricate transformations not accessible in solution. Here, we investigate a hydroalkoxylation reaction of a molecular species adsorbed on a Ag(111) surface by scanning tunneling microscopy complemented by X-ray electron spectroscopy and density functional theory. The closure of the furan ring proceeds at low temperature (down to 150 K) and without detectable side reactions. We unravel a proton-tunneling-mediated pathway theoretically and confirm experimentally its dominant contribution through the kinetic isotope effect with the deuterated derivative.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics
- electron transfer
- single molecule
- electron microscopy
- water soluble
- mass spectrometry
- high throughput
- molecular dynamics simulations
- minimally invasive
- optical coherence tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- energy transfer
- nitric oxide
- magnetic resonance
- ionic liquid
- amino acid
- tandem mass spectrometry