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Single-Molecule Investigation of Initiation Dynamics of an Organometallic Catalyst
Author(s) -
James D. Ng,
Sunil P. Upadhyay,
Angela N. Marquard,
Katherine M. Lupo,
Daniel A. Hinton,
Nicolas A. Padilla,
Desiree M. Bates,
Randall H. Goldsmith
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.6b00357
Subject(s) - chemistry , catalysis , molecule , heterogeneous catalysis , population , kinetics , molecular dynamics , selectivity , chemical physics , palladium , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , demography , quantum mechanics , sociology
The action of molecular catalysts comprises multiple microscopic kinetic steps whose nature is of central importance in determining catalyst activity and selectivity. Single-molecule microscopy enables the direct examination of these steps, including elucidation of molecule-to-molecule variability. Such molecular diversity is particularly important for the behavior of molecular catalysts supported at surfaces. We present the first combined investigation of the initiation dynamics of an operational palladium cross-coupling catalyst at the bulk and single-molecule levels, including under turnover conditions. Base-initiated kinetics reveal highly heterogeneous behavior indicative of diverse catalyst population. Unexpectedly, this distribution becomes more heterogeneous at increasing base concentration. We model this behavior with a two-step saturation mechanism and identify specific microscopic steps where chemical variability must exist in order to yield observed behavior. Critically, we reveal how structural diversity at a surface translates into heterogeneity in catalyst behavior, while demonstrating how single-molecule experiments can contribute to understanding of molecular catalysts.

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