posted on 2025-02-20, 13:34authored byTiexin Li, Zane Datson, André P. Birvé, Simone Ciampi, Thomas Fallon, Daniel S. Kosov, Jeffrey R. Reimers, Nadim Darwish
Bullvalene is the archetypical “shape shifting”
molecule,
undergoing continuous Cope rearrangements in solution at room temperature
at a rate of about 3 kHz. In the confined spaces of an scanning tunneling
microscopy break junction (STMBJ) setup, isolated bisarylbullvalene
molecules have recently been shown to exhibit very restricted isomerization
and slower interconversion rates. The restricted number of populated
bullvalene isomers displayed large variances in conductivity with
the confinement to manifest high piezoresistivity. Herein, the confinement
is increased by forming self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), focusing
on measuring the resulting electron-transfer rates, as well as identifying
viable SAM structural possibilities. First, bis-4-phenyl acetylene
bullvalene was synthesized and its SAMs were produced on Au(111).
Redox active ferrocene tail groups were then attached via a copper
catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) to enable electrochemical
measurements of SAM coverages and electron-transfer rates. The results
are consistent with only a single isomeric form being present on the
surface at any one time, with its nature varying with monolayer coverage
density. Density functional theory (DFT) simulations indicate that
a combination of steric interactions induced by the bisarylbullvalene
substitution, combined with head group and SAM packing effects, results
in this coverage-dependent isomeric selectivity. A small number of
very different types of SAM structural possibilities are identified.
These findings provide a pathway forward for the exploitation of bullvalene’s
constitutional isomerism in facilitating nano-electromechanical systems
(NEMS).