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1.
Chem Sci ; 2024 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39345775

ABSTRACT

The variety of possible benzene isomers may provide a fundamental basis for understanding structural and reactivity patterns in organic chemistry. However, the vast majority of these isomers remain unsynthesized, while most of the experimentally known species are only moderately stable. Consequently, there is a high probability that the theoretically proposed isomers would also be barely metastable, a factor that must be taken into account if their creation in the laboratory is sought. In this work, we studied the kinetic stability of all 73 hypothetical tricyclic benzene isomers, especially focusing on their nuclear quantum effects. With this in mind, we evaluated which species are theoretically possible to synthesize, detect, and isolate. Our computations predict that 26% of the previously deemed stable molecules are completely unsynthesizable due to their intrinsic quantum tunnelling instability pushing for their unimolecular decomposition even close to the absolute zero. Five more systems would be detectable, but they will slowly and inevitably degrade, while seven more supposedly stable systems will break apart in barrierless mechanisms.

2.
Nanoscale ; 16(32): 15366-15380, 2024 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39091174

ABSTRACT

In this work, we carried out an experimental and theoretical study on the formation of self-assembled monolayers of L-cysteine molecules on gold surfaces in the presence of methanol as a solvent. We report for the first time L-cysteine and methanol ordered structures forming a mixed self-assembled mono-layer on Au(100) surfaces under ambient conditions. Finger-like ordered structures with a relative height of 0.10-0.20 nm, average width of 2.0 nm and variable lengths were observed using scanning tunneling microscopy under room temperature and ambient pressure conditions. Using X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, it was determined that L-cysteine molecules bind to the gold surface through the sulfur atom of their thiol group in two molecular configurations: neutral and zwitterionic. We found that the finger-like structures are the result of complex interactions of L-cysteine molecules with gold surfaces and L-cysteine molecules with methanol molecules and among all three components of the system (L-cysteine + methanol + gold surfaces). These interactions were detected through attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Furthermore, adsorbate/substrate interactions were studied by employing ab initio calculations using density functional theory, resulting in molecular arrangements formed by chains of L-cysteine pairs surrounded by physisorbed methanol molecules.

3.
Nanoscale ; 16(14): 7093-7101, 2024 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38497989

ABSTRACT

Pyrazole derivatives are key in crystal engineering and liquid crystal fields and thrive in agriculture, pharmaceutical, or biomedicine industries. Such versatility relies in their supramolecular bond adaptability when forming hydrogen bonds or metal-pyrazole complexes. Interestingly, the precise structure of pyrazole-based macrocycles forming widespread porous structures is still unsolved. We bring insight into such fundamental question by studying the self-assembled structures of a bis-pyrazole derivative sublimed in ultra-high-vacuum conditions (without solvents) onto the three (111) noble metal surfaces. By means of high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy that is validated by gas phase density functional theory calculations, we find a common hexagonal nanoporous network condensed by triple hydrogen bonds at the molecule-metal interface. Such assembly is disrupted and divergent after annealing: (i) on copper, the molecular integrity is compromised leading to structural chaos, (ii) on silver, an incommensurate new oblique structure requiring molecular deprotonation is found and, (iii) on gold, metal-organic complexes are promoted yielding irregular chain structures. Our findings confirm the critical role of these metals on the different pyrazole nanoporous structure formation, discarding their preference for metal incorporation into the connecting nodes whenever there is no solvent involved.

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