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The Importance of Attractive Three-Point Interaction in Enantioselective Surface Chemistry: Stereospecific Adsorption of Serine on the Intrinsically Chiral Cu{531} Surface
55
Citations
24
References
2012
Year
Chemical EngineeringEngineeringSurface ChemistrySurface ScienceIntrinsically Chiral CuChemisorptionAttractive Three-point InteractionOrganic ChemistrySurface ReactivityCatalysisAdsorptionChemistrySupramolecular ChemistryStereospecific AdsorptionAsymmetric CatalysisAdsorption GeometriesSerine AdsorbChiral Cu
Both enantiomers of serine adsorb on the intrinsically chiral Cu{531} surface in two different adsorption geometries, depending on the coverage. At saturation, substrate bonds are formed through the two oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group and the amino group (μ3 coordination), whereas at lower coverage, an additional bond is formed through the deprotonated β-OH group (μ4 coordination). The latter adsorption geometry involves substrate bonds through three side groups of the chiral center, respectively, which leads to significantly larger enantiomeric differences in adsorption geometries and energies compared to the μ3 coordination, which involves only two side groups. This relatively simple model system demonstrates, in direct comparison, that attractive interactions of three side groups with the substrate are much more effective in inducing strong enantiomeric differences in heterogeneous chiral catalyst systems than hydrogen bonds or repulsive interactions.
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