There
are only a few examples of atomically precise, ligand protected,
bimetallic coinage metal clusters in which molecular structure remains
essentially unchanged over a wide composition range starting from
the corresponding homometallic species. Such model systems are particularly
useful to study the dynamics of alloy formation on the nanoscale.
Here we demonstrate the unusual reactivity of solvated metalloid-superatom
Ag29(BDT)12(PPh3)4 (BDT
= 1,3 benzenedithiol) clusters toward semiconducting Cu12S6(DPPPT)4 (DPPPT = bis(diphenylphosphino)pentane)
clusters as an efficient way to exchange multiple copper atoms into
the atomically precise silver clusters without changing overall the
structure type. Concentration-dependent UV–vis absorption and
online mass spectrometry shows that 14 Cu atoms can be exchanged into
the silver cluster. Beyond the 14 Cu atom exchange, the cluster degrades
to smaller thiolates. Information on cluster structures is obtained
from high-resolution ion mobility mass spectrometry, which shows a
linear decrease in collision cross section (CCS) with each Ag/Cu exchanged.
Several isomeric structures are calculated by density functional theory
(DFT), and their calculated collision cross sections are used to identify
the most stable isomers for each Ag/Cu exchange product. Ag/Cu exchange
is essentially limited to the cluster surface/shell. The core appears
not to be involved.