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An unexpected organometallic intermediate in surface-confined Ullmann coupling

Authors :
Galeotti, Gianluca
Di Giovannantonio, Marco
Cupo, Andrew
Xing, Sarah
Lipton-Duffin, Josh
Ebrahimi, Maryam
Vasseur, Guillaume
Kierren, Bertrand
Fagot-Revurat, Yannick
Tristant, Damien
Meunier, Vincent
Perepichka, Dmitrii F.
Rosei, Federico
Contini, Giorgio
Galeotti, Gianluca
Di Giovannantonio, Marco
Cupo, Andrew
Xing, Sarah
Lipton-Duffin, Josh
Ebrahimi, Maryam
Vasseur, Guillaume
Kierren, Bertrand
Fagot-Revurat, Yannick
Tristant, Damien
Meunier, Vincent
Perepichka, Dmitrii F.
Rosei, Federico
Contini, Giorgio
Source :
Nanoscale
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Ullmann coupling or, more generally, dehalogenative aryl-aryl coupling, is one of the most widely exploited chemical reactions to obtain one- and two-dimensional polymers on metal surfaces. It is generally described as a two-step reaction: (i) dehalogenation, resulting in the formation of a stable intermediate organometallic phase and subsequent (ii) C-C coupling. The topology of the resulting polymer depends on the number and positions of the halogen atoms in the haloaromatic precursor, although its orientation and order are determined by the structure of the intermediate phase. Hitherto, only one intermediate structure, identified as an organometallic (OM) phase, has been reported for such a reaction. Here we demonstrate the formation of two distinct OM phases during the temperature-induced growth of poly(para-phenylene) from 1,4-dibromobenzene precursors on Cu(110). Beyond the already known linear-OM chains, we show that a phase reorganization to a chessboard-like 2D-OM can be activated in a well-defined temperature range. This new intermediate phase, revealed only when the reaction is carried out at low molecular coverages, was characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, and modeled by density functional theory calculations. Our data show that the 2D-OM remains stable after cooling down the sample and is stabilized by four-Cu clusters at each node. The observation of such unexpected intermediate phase shows the complexity of the mechanisms underlying on-surface synthesis and broadens the understanding of Ullmann coupling, which continues to be astonishing despite its extensive use.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nanoscale
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1157276652
Document Type :
Electronic Resource