Nature Communications (Nov 2024)
Room-temperature selective cyclodehydrogenation on Au(111) via radical addition of open-shell resonance structures
Abstract
Abstract Cyclodehydrogenation is an important ring-formation reaction that can directly produce planar-conjugated carbon-based nanomaterials from nonplanar molecules. However, inherently high C–H bond energy necessitates a high temperature during dehydrogenation, and the ubiquity of C − H bonds in molecules and small differences in their bond energies hinder the selectivity of dehydrogenation. Here, we report a room-temperature cyclodehydrogenation reaction on Au(111) via radical addition of open-shell resonance structures and demonstrate that radical addition significantly decreases cyclodehydrogenation temperature and further improves the chemoselectivity of dehydrogenation. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and non-contact atomic force microscopy, we visualize the cascade reaction process involved in cyclodehydrogenation and determine atomic structures and molecular orbitals of the planar acetylene-linked oxa-nanographene products. The nonplanar intermediates observed during progression annealing, combined with density functional theory calculations, suggest that room-temperature cyclodehydrogenation involves the formation of transient radicals, intramolecular radical addition, and hydrogen elimination; and that the high chemoselectivity of cyclodehydrogenation arises from the reversibility and different thermodynamics of radical addition step.