The amino acid L-cysteine (Cys) adsorbs in highly ordered (3 square root of 3 x 6) R30 degrees lattices on Au(111) electrodes from 50 mM ammonium acetate, pH 4.6. We provide new high-resolution in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) data for the L-Cys adlayer. The data substantiate previous data with higher resolution, now at the submolecular level, where each L-Cys molecule shows a bilobed feature. The high image resolution has warranted a quantum chemical computational effort. The present work offers a density functional study of the geometry optimized adsorption of four L-Cys forms-the molecule, the anion, the neutral radical, and its zwitterion adsorbed a-top-at the bridge and at the threefold hollow site of a planar Au(111) Au12 cluster. This model is crude but enables the inclusion of other effects, particularly the tungsten tip represented as a single or small cluster of W-atoms, and the solvation of the L-Cys surface cluster. The computational data are recast as constant current-height profiles as the most common in situ STM mode. The computations show that the approximately neutral radical, with the carboxyl group pointing toward and the amino group pointing away from the surface, gives the most stable adsorption, with little difference between the a-top and threefold sites. Attractive dipolar interactions screened by a dielectric medium stabilize around a cluster size of six L-Cys entities, as observed experimentally. The computed STM images are different for the different L-Cys forms. Both lateral and vertical dimensions of the radical accord with the observed dimensions, while those of the molecule and anion are significantly more extended. A-top L-Cys radical adsorption further gives a bilobed height profile resembling the observed images, with comparable contributions from sulfur and the amino group. L-Cys radical a-top adsorption therefore emerges as the best representation of L-Cys adsorption on Au(111).
State-of-the-art in the area of quantum-chemical modeling of electron transfer (ET) processes at metal electrode/electrolyte solution interfaces is reviewed. Emphasis is put on key quantities which control the ET rate (activation energy, transmission coefficient, and work terms). Orbital overlap effect in electrocatalysis is thoroughly discussed. The advantages and drawbacks of cluster and periodical slab models for a metal electrode when describing redox processes are analyzed as well. It is stressed that reliable quantitative estimations of the rate constants of interfacial charge transfer reactions are hardly possible, while predictions of qualitatively interesting effects are more valuable.
We have used L-cysteine (Cys) as a model system to study the surface electronic structures of single molecules at the submolecular level in aqueous buffer solution by a combination of electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (in situ STM), electrochemistry including voltammetry and chronocoulometry, and density functional theory (DFT) computations. Cys molecules were assembled on single-crystal Au(110) surfaces to form a highly ordered monolayer with a periodic lattice structure of c(2x2) in which each unit contains two molecules; this conclusion is confirmed by the results of calculations based on a slab model for the metal surface. The ordered monolayer offers a platform for submolecular scale electronic mapping that is an issue of fundamental interest but remains a challenge in STM imaging science and surface chemistry. Single Cys molecules were mapped as three electronic subunits contributed mainly from three chemical moieties: thiol (-SH), carboxylic (-COOH), and amine (-NH2) groups. The contrasts of the three subunits depend on the environment (e.g., pH), which affects the electronic structure of adsorbed species. From the DFT computations focused on single molecules, rational analysis of the electronic structures is achieved to delineate the main factors that determine electronic contrasts in the STM images. These factors include the molecular orientation, the chemical nature of the elements or groups in the molecule, and the interaction of the elements with the substrate and tip. The computational images recast as constant-current-height profiles show that the most favorable molecular orientation is the adsorption of cysteine as a radical in zwitterionic form located on the bridge between the Au(110) atomic rows and with the amine and carboxyl group toward the solution bulk. The correlation between physical location and electronic contrast of the adsorbed molecules was also revealed by the computational data. The present study shows that cysteine packing in the adlayer on Au(110) from the liquid environment is in contrast to that from the ultrahigh-vacuum environment, suggesting solvent plays a role during molecular assembly.
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