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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Structural and Theoretical Basis for Ligand Exchange on Thiolate Monolayer Protected Gold Nanoclusters
Hannu HäkkinenSami MalolaVille MäkinenChristine L. HeineckeO. Andrea WongChristopher J. AckersonThomas W. Nisubject
Models Molecularchemistry.chemical_classificationta114LigandMetal NanoparticlesBridging ligandGeneral ChemistryAssociative substitutionCrystal structureCrystallography X-RayLigandsBiochemistryArticleCatalysisNanoclustersCrystallographyColloid and Surface ChemistrychemistryMonolayerSolventsThiolThermodynamicsDensity functional theoryGolddescription
Ligand exchange reactions are widely used for imparting new functionality on or integrating nanoparticles into devices. Thiolate-for-thiolate ligand exchange in monolayer protected gold nanoclusters has been used for over a decade; however, a firm structural basis of this reaction has been lacking. Herein, we present the first single-crystal X-ray structure of a partially exchanged Au(102)(p-MBA)(40)(p-BBT)(4) (p-MBA = para-mercaptobenzoic acid, p-BBT = para-bromobenzene thiol) with p-BBT as the incoming ligand. The crystal structure shows that 2 of the 22 symmetry-unique p-MBA ligand sites are partially exchanged to p-BBT under the initial fast kinetics in a 5 min timescale exchange reaction. Each of these ligand-binding sites is bonded to a different solvent-exposed Au atom, suggesting an associative mechanism for the initial ligand exchange. Density functional theory calculations modeling both thiol and thiolate incoming ligands postulate a mechanistic pathway for thiol-based ligand exchange. The discrete modification of a small set of ligand binding sites suggests Au(102)(p-MBA)(44) as a powerful platform for surface chemical engineering.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-08-02 | Journal of the American Chemical Society |