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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 7667, 2023 Nov 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37996475

ABSTRACT

Metal nanoparticle-organic interfaces are common but remain elusive for controlling reactions due to the complex interactions of randomly formed ligand-layers. This paper presents an approach for enhancing the selectivity of catalytic reactions by constructing a skin-like few-nanometre ultrathin crystalline porous covalent organic overlayer on a plasmonic nanoparticle surface. This organic overlayer features a highly ordered layout of pore openings that facilitates molecule entry without any surface poisoning effects and simultaneously endows favourable electronic effects to control molecular adsorption-desorption. Conformal organic overlayers are synthesised through the plasmonic oxidative activation and intermolecular covalent crosslinking of molecular units. We develop a light-operated multicomponent interfaced plasmonic catalytic platform comprising Pd-modified gold nanoparticles inside hollow silica to achieve the highly efficient and selective semihydrogenation of alkynes. This approach demonstrates a way to control molecular adsorption behaviours on metal surfaces, breaking the linear scaling relationship and simultaneously enhancing activity and selectivity.

2.
Adv Mater ; 35(4): e2200172, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35178769

ABSTRACT

A Z-scheme heterojunction with spatially separated cocatalysts is proposed for overcoming fundamental issues in photocatalytic water splitting, such as inefficient light absorption, charge recombination, and sluggish reaction kinetics. For efficient light absorption and interfacial charge separation, Z-scheme organic/inorganic heterojunction photocatalysts are synthesized by firmly immobilizing ultrathin g-C3 N4 on the surface of TiO2 hollow spheres via electrostatic interactions. Additionally, two cocatalysts, Pt and IrOx , are spatially separated along the Z-scheme charge-transfer pathway to enhance surface charge separation and reaction kinetics. The as-prepared Pt/g-C3 N4 /TiO2 /IrOx (PCTI) hollow sphere photocatalyst exhibits an exceptional H2 evolution rate of 8.15 mmol h-1 g-1 and a remarkable apparent quantum yield of 24.3% at 330 nm in the presence of 0.5 wt% Pt and 1.2 wt% IrOx cocatalysts on g-C3 N4 and TiO2 , respectively. Photoassisted Kelvin probe force microscopy is used to systematically analyze the Z-scheme charge-transfer mechanism within PCTI. Furthermore, the benefits of spatially separating cocatalysts in the PCTI system are methodically investigated in comparison to randomly depositing them. This work adequately demonstrates that the combination of a Z-scheme heterojunction and spatially separated cocatalysts can be a promising strategy for designing high-performance photocatalytic platforms for solar fuel production.

3.
Chemphyschem ; 22(2): 197-203, 2021 01 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33336873

ABSTRACT

Mechanisms for the spontaneous transformation of achiral chemical systems into states of enantiomeric purity have important ramifications in modern pharmacology and potential relevance to the origins of homochirality in life on Earth. Such mechanisms for enantiopurification are needed for production of chiral pharmaceuticals and other bioactive compounds. Previously proposed chemical mechanisms leading from achiral systems to near homochirality are initiated by a symmetry-breaking step resulting in a minor excess of one enantiomer via statistical fluctuations in enantiomer concentrations. Subsequent irreversible processes then amplify the majority enantiomer concentration while simultaneously suppressing minority enantiomer production. Herein, equilibrium adsorption of amino acid enantiomer mixtures onto chiral and achiral surfaces reveals amplification of surface enantiomeric excess relative to the gas phase; i. e. enantiopurification of chiral adsorbates by adsorption. This adsorption-induced amplification of enantiomeric excess is shown to be well-describe by the 2D Ising model. More importantly, the 2D-Ising model predicts formation of homochiral monolayers from adsorption of racemic mixtures or prochiral molecules on achiral surfaces; i. e. enantiopurification with no apparent chiral driving force.

4.
Langmuir ; 31(22): 6055-63, 2015 Jun 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25933641

ABSTRACT

Gas-phase equilibrium adsorption of D- and L-serine (Ser) mixtures and D- and L-phenylalanine (Phe) mixtures has been studied on the naturally chiral Cu{3,1,17}(R&S) surfaces. (13)C labeling of the l enantiomers (*L-Ser and *L-Phe) has enabled mass spectrometric enantiodiscrimination of the species desorbing from the surface following equilibrium adsorption. On the Cu{3,1,17}(R&S) surfaces, both equilibrium adsorption and the thermal decomposition kinetics of the D and *L enantiomers exhibit diastereomerism. Following exposure of the surfaces to D/*L mixtures, the relative equilibrium coverages of the two enantiomers are equal to their relative partial pressures in the gas phase, θ(D)/θ(*L) = P(D)/P(*L). This implies that adsorption is not measurably enantiospecific. The decomposition kinetics of Ser are enantiospecific whereas those of Phe are not. Comparison of these results with those for aspartic acid, alanine, and lysine suggests that enantiospecific adsorption on the naturally chiral Cu surfaces occurs for those amino acids that have side chains with functional groups that allow strong interactions with the surface. There is no apparent correlation between amino acids that exhibit enantiospecific adsorption and those that exhibit enantiospecific decomposition kinetics.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/chemistry , Copper/chemistry , Adsorption , Particle Size , Stereoisomerism , Surface Properties
5.
Nat Chem ; 7(6): 520-5, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25991532

ABSTRACT

The homochirality of biomolecules is a signature of life on Earth and has significant implications in, for example, the production of pharmaceutical compounds. It has been suggested that biomolecular homochirality may have arisen from the amplification of a spontaneously formed small enantiomeric excess (e.e.). Many minerals exhibit naturally chiral surfaces and so adsorption has been proposed as one possible mechanism for such an amplification of e.e. Here we show that when gas-phase mixtures of D- and L-aspartic acid are exposed to an achiral Cu(111) surface, a small e.e. in the gas phase, e.e.g, leads to an amplification of the e.e. on the surface, e.e.s, under equilibrium conditions. Adsorption-induced amplification of e.e. does not require a chiral surface. The dependence of e.e.s on e.e.g has been modelled successfully using a Langmuir-like adsorption isotherm that incorporates the formation of homochiral adsorbate clusters on the surface.


Subject(s)
Surface Properties , Adsorption , Spectrum Analysis/methods , Stereoisomerism
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