4.6 Article

Silicon (100) Electrodes Resistant to Oxidation in Aqueous Solutions: An Unexpected Benefit of Surface Acetylene Moieties

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 2530-2539

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la803710d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects [DP0772356]
  2. International Postgraduate Research Scholarship Australian Government
  3. Research Postgraduate Award from the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering (AINSE)
  4. Australian Research Council [DP0772356] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Here we report on the functionalization of alkyne-terminated alkyl monolayers on highly doped Si(100) using click reactions to immobilize ferrocene derivatives. The reaction of hydrogen-terminated silicon surfaces with a diyne species was shown to afford very robust functional surfaces where the oxidation of the underlying substrate was negligible. Detailed characterization using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray reflectometry, and cyclic voltammetry demonstrated that the surface acetylenes had reacted in moderate yield to give surfaces exposing ferrocene moieties. Upon extensive exposure of the redox-active architecture to oxidative environments during preparative and characterization steps, no evidence of SiOx contaminants was shown for derivatized SAMs prepared from single-component 1,8-nonadiyne, fully acetylenylated, monolayers. An analysis of the redox behavior of the prepared Si(100) electrodes based on relevant parameters such as peak splitting and position and shape of the reduction/oxidation waves depicted a well-behaved redox architecture whose spectroscopic and electrochemical properties were not significantly altered even after prolonged cycling in aqueous media between -100 and 800 mV versus AglAgCl. The reported strategy represents an experimentally simple approach for the preparation of silicon-based electrodes where, in addition to close-to-ideal redox behavior, remarkable electrode stability can be achieved. Both the presence of a distal alkyne moiety and temperatures of formation above 100 degrees C were required to achieve this surface stabilization.

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