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Se-C Cleavage of Hexane Selenol at Steps on Au(111).
Besharat, Zahra; Ghadami Yazdi, Milad; Wakeham, Deborah; Johnson, Magnus; Rutland, Mark W; Göthelid, Mats; Grönbeck, Henrik.
Afiliação
  • Besharat Z; Material Physics, MNF, SCI, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-164 40, Sweden.
  • Ghadami Yazdi M; Department of Chemistry, Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-100 44, Sweden.
  • Wakeham D; Material Physics, MNF, SCI, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-164 40, Sweden.
  • Johnson M; Department of Chemistry, Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-100 44, Sweden.
  • Rutland MW; Department of Chemistry, Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-100 44, Sweden.
  • Göthelid M; Department of Chemistry, Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, KTH Royal Institute of Technology , Stockholm SE-100 44, Sweden.
  • Grönbeck H; Chemistry, Materials and Surfaces, SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden , Box 5607, Stockholm SE-114 86, Sweden.
Langmuir ; 34(8): 2630-2636, 2018 02 27.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29405715
ABSTRACT
Selenols are considered as an alternative to thiols in self-assembled monolayers, but the Se-C bond is one limiting factor for their usefulness. In this study, we address the stability of the Se-C bond by a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of gas-phase-deposited hexane selenol (CH3(CH2)5SeH) on Au(111) using photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, and density functional theory (DFT). Experimentally, we find that initial adsorption leaves atomic Se on the surface without any carbon left on the surface, whereas further adsorption generates a saturated selenolate layer. The Se 3d component from atomic Se appears at 0.85 eV lower binding energy than the selenolate-related component. DFT calculations show that the most stable structure of selenols on Au(111) is in the form of RSe-Au-SeR complexes adsorbed on the unreconstructed Au(111) surface. This is similar to thiols on Au(111). Calculated Se 3d core-level shifts between elemental Se and selenolate in this structure nicely reproduce the experimentally recorded shifts. Dissociation of RSeH and subsequent formation of RH are found to proceed with high barriers on defect-free Au(111) terraces, with the highest barrier for scissoring R-Se. However, at steps, these barriers are considerably lower, allowing for Se-C bond breaking and hexane desorption, leaving elemental Se at the surface. Hexane is formed by replacing the Se-C bond with a H-C bond by using the hydrogen liberated from the selenol to selenolate transformation.

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2018 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2018 Tipo de documento: Article