The role of organometallic intermediates during on-surface polymerization via Ullmann coupling was studied on Ag(111). The polymerization progress was monitored by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) was used to characterize organometallic and covalent networks and to identify the temperature regimes for organometallic and covalent bond formation.
Surface-assisted Ullmann coupling
is the workhorse of on-surface
synthesis. Despite its obvious relevance, many fundamental and mechanistic
aspects remain elusive. To shed light on individual reaction steps
and their progression with temperature, temperature-programmed X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy (TP-XPS) experiments are performed for
a prototypical model system. The activation of the coupling by initial
dehalogenation is tracked by monitoring Br 3d core levels, whereas the C 1s
signature is used to follow the emergence of metastable organometallic
intermediates and their conversion to the final covalent products
upon heating in real time. The employed 1,3,5-tris(4-bromophenyl)benzene
precursor is comparatively studied on Ag(111) versus Au(111), whereby
intermolecular bonds and network topologies are additionally characterized
by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Besides the well-comprehended
differences in activation temperatures for debromination, the thermal
progression shows marked differences between the two surfaces. Debromination
proceeds rapidly on Ag(111), but is relatively gradual on Au(111).
While on Ag(111) debromination is well explained by first-order reaction
kinetics, thermodynamics prevail on Au(111), underpinned by a close
agreement between experimentally deduced and density functional theory
(DFT) calculated reaction enthalpies. Thermodynamically controlled
debromination on Au(111) over a large temperature range implies an
unexpectedly long lifetime of surface-stabilized radicals prior to
covalent coupling, as corroborated by TP-XPS of C 1s core levels.
These insights are anticipated to play an important role regarding
our ability to rationally synthesize atomically precise low-dimensional
covalent nanostructures on surfaces.
Self-assembled monolayers of 1,3,5-tris(4'-biphenyl-4"-carbonitrile)benzene, a large functional trinitrile molecule, on the (111) surfaces of copper and silver under ultrahigh vacuum conditions were studied by scanning tunneling microscopy and low-energy electron diffraction. A densely packed hydrogen-bonded polymorph was equally observed on both surfaces. Additionally, deposition onto Cu(111) yielded a well-ordered metal-coordinated porous polymorph that coexisted with the hydrogen-bonded structure. The required coordination centers were supplied by the adatom gas of the Cu(111) surface. On Ag(111), however, the well-ordered metal-coordinated network was not observed. Differences between the adatom reactivities on copper and silver and the resulting bond strengths of the respective coordination bonds are held responsible for this substrate dependence. By utilizing ultralow deposition rates, we demonstrate that on Cu(111) the adatom kinetics plays a decisive role in the expression of intermolecular bonds and hence structure selection.
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