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Sterically controlled mechanochemistry under hydrostatic pressure
Author(s) -
Hao Yan,
Fan Yang,
Ding Pan,
Yu Lin,
J. Nathan Hohman,
Diego SolisIbarra,
Fei Hua Li,
Jeremy Dahl,
Robert M. K. Carlson,
Boryslav A. Tkachenko,
Andrey A. Fokin,
Peter R. Schreiner,
Giulia Galli,
Wendy L. Mao,
ZhiXun Shen,
Nicholas A. Melosh
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature25765
Subject(s) - mechanochemistry , hydrostatic pressure , chemical physics , chemical bond , chemistry , isotropy , materials science , steric effects , computational chemistry , nanotechnology , thermodynamics , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics
Mechanical stimuli can modify the energy landscape of chemical reactions and enable reaction pathways, offering a synthetic strategy that complements conventional chemistry. These mechanochemical mechanisms have been studied extensively in one-dimensional polymers under tensile stress using ring-opening and reorganization, polymer unzipping and disulfide reduction as model reactions. In these systems, the pulling force stretches chemical bonds, initiating the reaction. Additionally, it has been shown that forces orthogonal to the chemical bonds can alter the rate of bond dissociation. However, these bond activation mechanisms have not been possible under isotropic, compressive stress (that is, hydrostatic pressure). Here we show that mechanochemistry through isotropic compression is possible by molecularly engineering structures that can translate macroscopic isotropic stress into molecular-level anisotropic strain. We engineer molecules with mechanically heterogeneous components-a compressible ('soft') mechanophore and incompressible ('hard') ligands. In these 'molecular anvils', isotropic stress leads to relative motions of the rigid ligands, anisotropically deforming the compressible mechanophore and activating bonds. Conversely, rigid ligands in steric contact impede relative motion, blocking reactivity. We combine experiments and computations to demonstrate hydrostatic-pressure-driven redox reactions in metal-organic chalcogenides that incorporate molecular elements that have heterogeneous compressibility, in which bending of bond angles or shearing of adjacent chains activates the metal-chalcogen bonds, leading to the formation of the elemental metal. These results reveal an unexplored reaction mechanism and suggest possible strategies for high-specificity mechanosynthesis.

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