Despite
chromium being among the first transition metals ever reported to
bind to an NHC, chromium NHC complexes, especially in mid and high
oxidation states, have received scant attention. Herein, the synthesis,
characterization, and reactivity of a series of Cr(II) to Cr(V) complexes
bearing a 16-atom ringed dianionic tetra-NHC macrocycle are reported.
The Cr(II) dimer is diamagnetic and displays a very short Cr–Cr
quadruple bond, unprecedented for Cr-NHC complexes to date. Oxidative
cleavage of the Cr–Cr bond leads to the formation of a highly
stable diamagnetic Cr(IV) oxo complex. Similar reactions with organic
azides lead to paramagnetic Cr(IV) imide complexes. Notably, the Cr(IV)
oxo can be oxidized in a reversible reaction to yield a Cr(V) cationic
oxo complex, which is a very rare high oxidation state Cr-NHC-compound.
This Cr(V) oxo undergoes stoichiometric oxygen atom transfer. Similar
reactions were attempted with molybdenum and tungsten to form macrocyclic
NHC complexes, but only a molybdenum dimer could be isolated.
N-Heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) are promising monolayer-forming
ligands that can overcome limitations of thiol-based monolayers in
terms of stability, surface functionality, and reactivity across a
variety of transition-metal surfaces. Recent publications have reported
the ability of NHCs to support biomolecular receptors on gold substrates
for sensing applications and improved tolerance to prolonged biofluid
exposure relative to thiols. However, important questions remain regarding
the stability of these monolayers when subjected to voltage perturbations,
which is needed for applications with electrochemical platforms. Here,
we investigate the ability of two NHCs, 1,3-diisopropylbenzimidazole
and 5-(ethoxycarbonyl)-1,3-diisopropylbenzimidazole, to form monolayers
via self-assembly from methanolic solutions of their trifluoromethanesulfonate
salts. We compare the electrochemical behavior of the resulting monolayers
relative to that of benchmark mercaptohexanol monolayers in phosphate-buffered
saline. Within the −0.15 to 0.25 V vs Ag|AgCl voltage window,
NHC monolayers are stable on gold surfaces, wherein they electrochemically
perform like thiol-based monolayers and undergo similar reorganization
kinetics, displaying long-term stability under incubation in buffered
media and under continuous voltammetric interrogation. At negative
voltages, NHC monolayers cathodically desorb from the electrode surface
at lower bias (−0.1 V) than thiol-based monolayers (−0.5
V). At voltages more positive than 0.25 V, NHC monolayers anodically
desorb from electrode surfaces at similar voltages to thiol-based
monolayers. These results highlight new limitations to NHC monolayer
stability imposed by electrochemical interrogation of the underlying
gold electrodes. Our results serve as a framework for future optimization
of NHC monolayers on gold for electrochemical applications, as well
as structure–functionality studies of NHCs on gold.
The widespread application of laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (LDI‐MS) highlights the need for a bright and multiplexable labeling platform. While ligand‐capped Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) have emerged as a promising LDI‐MS contrast agent, the predominant thiol ligands suffer from low ion yields and extensive fragmentation. In this work, we develop a N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligand platform that enhances AuNP LDI‐MS performance. NHC scaffolds are tuned to generate barcoded AuNPs which, when benchmarked against thiol‐AuNPs, are bright mass tags and form unfragmented ions in high yield. To illustrate the transformative potential of NHC ligands, the mass tags were employed in three orthogonal applications: monitoring a bioconjugation reaction, performing multiplexed imaging, and storing and reading encoded information. These results demonstrate that NHC‐nanoparticle systems are an ideal platform for LDI‐MS and greatly broaden the scope of nanoparticle contrast agents.
The widespread application of laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (LDI‐MS) highlights the need for a bright and multiplexable labeling platform. While ligand‐capped Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) have emerged as a promising LDI‐MS contrast agent, the predominant thiol ligands suffer from low ion yields and extensive fragmentation. In this work, we develop a N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligand platform that enhances AuNP LDI‐MS performance. NHC scaffolds are tuned to generate barcoded AuNPs which, when benchmarked against thiol‐AuNPs, are bright mass tags and form unfragmented ions in high yield. To illustrate the transformative potential of NHC ligands, the mass tags were employed in three orthogonal applications: monitoring a bioconjugation reaction, performing multiplexed imaging, and storing and reading encoded information. These results demonstrate that NHC‐nanoparticle systems are an ideal platform for LDI‐MS and greatly broaden the scope of nanoparticle contrast agents.
Combining N‐heterocyclic carbenes with gold nanoparticles provides an ultrabright and fragment‐free ionization platform for laser‐desorption mass spectrometry. In their Research Article (e202219182), David M. Jenkins, Jon P. Camden, and co‐workers show that NHC‐functionalized nanoparticles can “give gold wings” in the mass spectrometer, enabling next‐generation applications of mass barcoding, data storage, and bioconjugation reaction monitoring.
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