6 research outputs found
Chiral Surface from Achiral Ingredients: Modification of Cu(110) with Phthalic Acid
The
adsorption of dicarboxylic acids is a classical model approach
for understanding molecular recognition at surfaces. The interaction
of achiral phthalic acid with an achiral Cu(110) surface has been
investigated in ultrahigh vacuum by means of scanning tunneling microscopy,
low-energy electron diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy,
reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy, temperature-programmed
desorption, and density functional theory. Different ordered domains
at a length scale of several tens of nanometers are observed, of which
three are enantiomorphous and therefore appear in two mirror-symmetric
forms. Theoretical considerations suggest that spontaneous mirror-symmetry
breaking occurs at the single-molecular level, in which the surface
becomes also chirally distorted
<i>Z</i><sub>3</sub> Charge Density Wave of Silicon Atomic Chains on a Vicinal Silicon Surface
An ideal one-dimensional
electronic system is formed along atomic
chains on Au-decorated vicinal silicon surfaces, but the nature of
its low-temperature phases has been puzzling for last two decades.
Here, we unambiguously identify the low-temperature structural distortion
of this surface using high-resolution atomic force microscopy and
scanning tunneling microscopy. The most important structural ingredient
of this surface, the step-edge Si chains, are found to be strongly
buckled, every third atom down, forming trimer unit cells. This observation
is consistent with the recent model of rehybridized dangling bonds
and rules out the antiferromagnetic spin ordering proposed earlier.
The spectroscopy and electronic structure calculation indicate a charge
density wave insulator with a Z3 topology,
making it possible to exploit topological phases and excitations.
The tunneling current was found to substantially lower the energy
barrier between three degenerate CDW states, which induces a dynamically
fluctuating CDW at very low temperature
On-Surface Synthesis of Square-Type Porphyrin Tetramers with Central Antiaromatic Cyclooctatetraene Moiety
The synthesis of two-dimensionally
extended polycyclic
heteroatomic
molecules keeps attracting considerable attention. In particular,
frameworks bearing planar cyclooctatetraenes (COT) moieties can display
intriguing properties, including antiaromaticity. Here, we present
an on-surface chemistry route to square-type porphyrin tetramers with
a central COT ring, coexisting with other oligomers. This approach
employing temperature-induced dehydrogenative porphyrin homocoupling
in an ultrahigh vacuum environment provides access to surface-supported,
unsubstituted porphyrin tetramers that are not easily achievable by
conventional synthesis means. Specifically, monomeric free-base (2H-P)
and Zn-metalated (Zn-P) porphines (P) were employed to form square-type
free-base and Zn-functionalized tetramers on Ag(100). An atomic-level
characterization by bond-resolved atomic force microscopy and scanning
tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy is provided, identifying the
molecular structures. Complemented by density functional theory modeling,
the electronic structure is elucidated, indeed revealing antiaromaticity
induced by the COT moiety. The present study thus gives access, and
insights, to a porphyrin oligomer, representing both a model system
for directly fused porphyrins and a potential building block for conjugated,
extended two-dimensional porphyrin sheets
Selective Activation of Aromatic C–H Bonds Catalyzed by Single Gold Atoms at Room Temperature
Selective
activation and controlled functionalization of C–H
bonds in organic molecules is one of the most desirable processes
in synthetic chemistry. Despite progress in heterogeneous catalysis
using metal surfaces, this goal remains challenging due to the stability
of C–H bonds and their ubiquity in precursor molecules, hampering
regioselectivity. Here, we examine the interaction between 9,10-dicyanoanthracene
(DCA) molecules and Au adatoms on a Ag(111) surface at room temperature
(RT). Characterization via low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy,
spectroscopy, and noncontact atomic force microscopy, supported by
theoretical calculations, revealed the formation of organometallic
DCA–Au–DCA dimers, where C atoms at the ends of the
anthracene moieties are bonded covalently to single Au atoms. The
formation of this organometallic compound is initiated by a regioselective
cleaving of C–H bonds at RT. Hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular
mechanics calculations show that this regioselective C–H bond
cleaving is enabled by an intermediate metal–organic complex
which significantly reduces the dissociation barrier of a specific
C–H bond. Harnessing the catalytic activity of single metal
atoms, this regioselective on-surface C–H activation reaction
at RT offers promising routes for future synthesis of functional organic
and organometallic materials
Characteristic Contrast in Δ<i>f</i><sub>min</sub> Maps of Organic Molecules Using Atomic Force Microscopy
Scanning
tunneling microscopy and atomic force microscopy can provide detailed
information about the geometric and electronic structure of molecules
with submolecular spatial resolution. However, an essential capability
to realize the full potential of these techniques for chemical applications
is missing from the scanning probe toolbox: chemical recognition of
organic molecules. Here, we show that maps of the minima of frequency
shift–distance curves extracted from 3D data cubes contain
characteristic contrast. A detailed theoretical analysis based on
density functional theory and molecular mechanics shows that these
features are characteristic for the investigated species. Structurally
similar but chemically distinct molecules yield significantly different
features. We find that the van der Waals and Pauli interaction, together
with the specific adsorption geometry of a given molecule on the surface,
accounts for the observed contrast
Tuning the Diradical Character of Pentacene Derivatives via Non-Benzenoid Coupling Motifs
The development of
functional organic molecules requires structures
of increasing size and complexity, which are typically obtained by
the covalent coupling of smaller building blocks. Herein, with the
aid of high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy
and density functional theory, the coupling of a sterically demanded
pentacene derivative on Au(111) into fused dimers connected by non-benzenoid
rings was studied. The diradical character of the products was tuned
according to the coupling section. In particular, the antiaromaticity
of cyclobutadiene as the coupling motif and its position within the
structure play a decisive role in shifting the natural orbital occupancies
toward a stronger diradical electronic character. Understanding these
structure–property relations is desirable not only for fundamental
reasons but also for designing new complex and functional molecular
structures
