On-surface Ullmann coupling reaction of aryl chlorides has been achieved on Cu(111), Ag(111), and Au(111), and the mechanism has been investigated on the single molecule level using scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory. The different reactivity of the aryl halides was utilized to design a stepwise on-surface synthesis, which affords a zigzag template and then converts to 2D porous networks.
On-surface Pd- and Cu-catalyzed C-C coupling reactions between phenyl bromide functionalized porphyrin derivatives on an Au(111) surface have been investigated under ultra-high vacuum conditions by using scanning tunneling microscopy and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. We monitored the isothermal reaction kinetics by allowing the reaction to proceed at different temperatures. We discovered that the reactions catalyzed by Pd or Cu can be described as a two-phase process that involves an initial activation followed by C-C bond formation. However, the distinctive reaction kinetics and the C-C bond-formation yield associated with the two catalysts account for the different reaction mechanisms: the initial activation phase is the rate-limiting step for the Cu-catalyzed reaction at all temperatures tested, whereas the later phase of C-C formation is the rate-limiting step for the Pd-catalyzed reaction at high temperature. Analysis of rate constants of the Pd-catalyzed reactions allowed us to determine its activation energy as (0.41±0.03) eV.
The efficiency of Ullmann reaction of aryl chlorides on an Au(111) surface has been substantially increased by using dosed Cu as a catalyst. The different reactivity of aryl bromides and aryl chlorides has been exploited to design a programmed, on-surface synthesis to form 2D covalent organic frameworks.
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