Nature Communications (Dec 2023)

Site-selective chemical reactions by on-water surface sequential assembly

  • Anupam Prasoon,
  • Xiaoqing Yu,
  • Mike Hambsch,
  • David Bodesheim,
  • Kejun Liu,
  • Angelica Zacarias,
  • Nguyen Ngan Nguyen,
  • Takakazu Seki,
  • Aerzoo Dianat,
  • Alexander Croy,
  • Gianaurelio Cuniberti,
  • Philippe Fontaine,
  • Yuki Nagata,
  • Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld,
  • Renhao Dong,
  • Mischa Bonn,
  • Xinliang Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44129-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Controlling site-selectivity and reactivity in chemical reactions continues to be a key challenge in modern synthetic chemistry. Here, we demonstrate the discovery of site-selective chemical reactions on the water surface via a sequential assembly approach. A negatively charged surfactant monolayer on the water surface guides the electrostatically driven, epitaxial, and aligned assembly of reagent amino-substituted porphyrin molecules, resulting in a well-defined J-aggregated structure. This constrained geometry of the porphyrin molecules prompts the subsequent directional alignment of the perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride reagent, enabling the selective formation of a one-sided imide bond between porphyrin and reagent. Surface-specific in-situ spectroscopies reveal the underlying mechanism of the dynamic interface that promotes multilayer growth of the site-selective imide product. The site-selective reaction on the water surface is further demonstrated by three reversible and irreversible chemical reactions, such as imide-, imine-, and 1, 3-diazole (imidazole)- bonds involving porphyrin molecules. This unique sequential assembly approach enables site-selective chemical reactions that can bring on-water surface synthesis to the forefront of modern organic chemistry.