Journal article

Imaging Successive Intermediate States of the On-Surface Ullmann Reaction on Cu(111): Role of the Metal Coordination


Authors listZint, S; Ebeling, D; Schlöder, T; Ahles, S; Mollenhauer, D; Wegner, HA; Schirmeisen, A

Publication year2017

Pages4183-4190

JournalACS Nano

Volume number11

Issue number4

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b01109

PublisherAmerican Chemical Society


Abstract

The in-depth knowledge about on-surface reaction mechanisms is crucial for the tailor-made design of covalently bonded organic frameworks, for applications such as nanoelectronic or -optical devices. Latest developments in atomic force microscopy, which rely on functionalizing the tip with single CO molecules at low temperatures, allow to image molecular systems with submolecular resolution. Here, we are using this technique to study the complete reaction pathway of the on-surface Ullmann-type coupling between bromotriphenylene molecules on a Cu(111) surface. All steps of the Ullmann reaction, i.e., bromotriphenylenes, triphenylene radicals, organometallic intermediates, and bistriphenylenes, were imaged with submolecular resolution. Together with density functional theory calculations with dispersion correction, our study allows to address the long-standing question of how the organometallic intermediates are coordinated via Cu surface or adatoms.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleZint, S., Ebeling, D., Schlöder, T., Ahles, S., Mollenhauer, D., Wegner, H., et al. (2017) Imaging Successive Intermediate States of the On-Surface Ullmann Reaction on Cu(111): Role of the Metal Coordination, ACS Nano, 11(4), pp. 4183-4190. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b01109

APA Citation styleZint, S., Ebeling, D., Schlöder, T., Ahles, S., Mollenhauer, D., Wegner, H., & Schirmeisen, A. (2017). Imaging Successive Intermediate States of the On-Surface Ullmann Reaction on Cu(111): Role of the Metal Coordination. ACS Nano. 11(4), 4183-4190. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b01109


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 15:21