Understanding the interaction between carboxylates and coinage metals from first principles

Carboxylate groups have recently been explored as a new type of ligand to protect superatomic copper and silver nanoclusters, but little is known of the interfacial structure and bonding. Here, we employ density functional theory to investigate the interfaces of a model carboxylate group, CH3COO, on...

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Published inThe Journal of chemical physics Vol. 155; no. 3; pp. 034301 - 34307
Main Authors Liu, Tongyu, Jiang, De-en
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melville American Institute of Physics 21.07.2021
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Summary:Carboxylate groups have recently been explored as a new type of ligand to protect superatomic copper and silver nanoclusters, but little is known of the interfacial structure and bonding. Here, we employ density functional theory to investigate the interfaces of a model carboxylate group, CH3COO, on the coinage metal surfaces and clusters. We found that μ2-CH3COO is the most preferred binding mode on the three M(111) surfaces (M = Cu, Ag, and Au), while μ3-CH3COO is also stable on Cu(111) and Ag(111). The saturation coverage was found to be about seven CH3COO groups per nm2 for all surfaces. CH3COO has the strongest binding on Cu and weakest on Au. Moving from the flat surfaces to the icosahedral M13 clusters, we found that the eight-electron superatomic [M13(CH3COO)6]− nanoclusters also prefer the μ2-CH3COO mode on the surface. The icosahedral kernel in [Cu13(CH3COO)6]− and [Ag13(CH3COO)6]− was well maintained after geometry optimization, but a larger deformation was found in [Au13(CH3COO)6]−. Given the broad availability and variety of carboxylic acids including amino acids, our work suggests that carboxylate groups could be the next-generation ligands to further expand the universe of atomically precise metal clusters, especially for Cu and Ag.
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USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/5.0053045