Thiolate-protected
metal clusters are materials of ever-growing
importance in fundamental and applied research. Knowledge of their
single-crystal X-ray structures has been instrumental to enable advanced
molecular understanding of their intriguing properties. So far, however,
a general, reliable, chemically clean approach to prepare single crystals
suitable for accurate crystallographic analysis was missing. Here
we show that single crystals of thiolate-protected clusters can be
grown in large quantity and very high quality by electrocrystallization.
This method relies on the fact that charged clusters display a higher
solubility in polar solvents than their neutral counterparts. Nucleation
of the electrogenerated insoluble clusters directly onto the electrode
surface eventually leads to the formation of a dense forest of millimeter-long
single crystals. Electrocrystallization of three known Au25(SR)180 clusters is described. A new cluster,
Au25(S-nC5H11)18, was also prepared and found to crystallize by forming bundles
of millimeter-long Au25 polymers