6533b82dfe1ef96bd1290b95

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Solubility-Driven Isolation of a Metastable Nonagold Cluster with Body-Centered Cubic Structure.

Hui ShenSami MalolaHannu HäkkinenXihua LiPeng YuanBoon K. TeoElli SeleniusPeng-peng RuanOmar López-estradaShui-chao LinNanfeng Zheng

subject

cluster transformationBand gapnanoclusterCubic crystal system010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysiskultaNanoclusterslaw.inventionMetalklusteritlawMetastabilityCluster (physics)metastable compoundsAu9CrystallizationGold cluster010405 organic chemistryChemistryOrganic ChemistryGeneral Chemistrygold0104 chemical sciencesCrystallographyvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumnanohiukkaset

description

The conventional synthetic methodology of atomically precise gold nanoclusters using reduction in solutions offers only thermodynamically most stable nanoclusters. We report herein a solubility‐driven isolation strategy to access the synthesis of a metastable gold cluster. The cluster, with the composition of [Au 9 (PPh 3 ) 8 ] + ( 1 ), displays an unusual, nearly perfect body‐centered‐cubic (bcc) structure. As revealed by ESI‐MS and UV/Vis measurement, the cluster is metastable in solution and converts to the well‐known [Au 11 (PPh 3 ) 8 Cl 2 ] + ( 2 ) within just 90 min. DFT calculations revealed that while both 1 and 2 are eight‐electron superatoms, there is a driving force to convert 1 to 2 as shown by the increased cohesion and larger HOMO‐LUMO energy gap of 2 . The isolation and crystallization of the metastable gold cluster were achieved in a biphasic reaction system in which reduction of gold precursors and crystallization of 1 took place concurrently. This synthetic protocol represents a successful strategy for investigations of other metastable species in metal nanocluster chemistry. peerReviewed

10.1002/chem.202001753https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32302026