4.8 Article

Competition between Hydrogen Bonds and Coordination Bonds Steered by the Surface Molecular Coverage

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 3727-3732

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b08374

Keywords

bond conversion; hydrogen bond; metal-organic coordination bond; self-assembly; scanning tunneling microscopy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21473123, 21622307, 51403157]

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In addition to the choices of metal atoms/molecular linkers and surfaces, several crucial parameters, including surface temperature, molecular stoichiometric ratio, electrical stimulation, concentration, and solvent effect for liquid/solid interfaces, have been demonstrated to play key roles in the formation of on-surface self-assembled supramolecular architectures. Moreover; self-assembled structural transformations frequently occur in response to a delicate control over those parameters, which, in most cases, involve either conversions from relatively weak interactions to stronger ones (e.g., hydrogen bonds to coordination bonds) or transformations between the comparable interactions (e.g., different coordination binding modes or hydrogen bonding configurations).. However, intermolecular bond conversions from relatively strong coordination bonds to weak hydrogen bonds were rarely reported. Moreover, to our knowledge, a reversible conversion between hydrogen bonds and coordination bonds has not been demonstrated before. Herein, we have demonstrated a facile strategy for the regulation of stepwise intermolecular bond conversions from the metal organic coordination bond (Cu-N) to the weak hydrogen bond (CH center dot center dot center dot N) by increasing the surface molecular coverage. From the DFT calculations we quantify that the loss in intermolecular interaction energy is compensated by the increased molecular adsorption energy at higher molecular coverage. Moreover, we achieved a reversible conversion from the weak hydrogen bond to the coordination bond by decreasing the surface molecular coverage.

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