4.2 Article

Superatomic Signature and Reactivity of Silver Clusters with Oxygen: Double Magic Ag17- with Geometric and Electronic Shell Closure

Journal

CCS CHEMISTRY
Volume 3, Issue 12, Pages 219-229

Publisher

CHINESE CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.31635/ccschem.020.202000719

Keywords

metal cluster; superatom; gas-phase reaction; Ag-17(-); shell closure

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21802146, 21722308, 11974068, 91961204]
  2. CAS Key Research Project of Frontier Science (CAS) [QYZDB-SSW-SLH024]

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Understanding the stability and reactivity of silver clusters towards oxygen can offer insights for designing new materials of coinage metals with atomic precision. A systematic study on anionic silver clusters Ag-n(-) (n = 10-34) revealed odd-even alternation in reaction rates and stability of chosen clusters such as Ag-13(-) and Ag-17-19(-). First-principles calculations showed that Ag-17(-) exhibited unique characteristics with symmetric ellipsoidal structure and electronic shell closure, highlighting its 17c-2e multicenter bonding and high HOMO-LUMO gap.
Understanding the stability and reactivity of silver clusters toward oxygen provides insights to design new materials of coinage metals with atomic precision. Herein, we report a systematic study on anionic silver clusters, Ag-n(-) (n = 10-34), by reacting them with O-2 under multiple-collision conditions. Mass spectrometry observation presents the odd-even alternation effect on the reaction rates of these Ag-n(-) clusters. A few chosen clusters such as Ag-13(-) and Ag-17-19(-) hold up in the presence of excessive oxygen gas reactants. First-principles calculation results reveal that the chemical stability of D-4d Ag-17(-) is associated with its symmetric ellipsoidal structure and the electronic shell closure of superatomic orbitals (1S(2)vertical bar 1P(4 vertical bar)1P(2)vertical bar 1D(4)vertical bar 1D(6)parallel to 2S(0). This results in 17c-2e multicenter bonding and a large highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO)-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) gap, the highest electron detachment energy and incremental binding energy among all the studied Ag-n(-) clusters, as well as the smallest O-2-binding energy and least charge transfer from Ag to O-2. We fully demonstrate the superatomic signature of these silver clusters and emphasize the unique Ag-17(-) with both geometric and electronic shell closure, shedding light on the 18e stability for the coinage of metal clusters. The superatomic charac teristics are also disclosed for Ag-16(-), Ag-18(-), and Ag-3(2)- clusters.

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