Publication | Closed Access
Identifying Enclosed Chemical Reaction and Dynamics at the Molecular Level Using Shell-Isolated Miniaturized Plasmonic Liquid Marble
37
Citations
25
References
2016
Year
EngineeringSurface-enhanced Raman ScatteringSurface NanotechnologyEx Situ MethodsChemistrySoft MatterChemical EngineeringEnclosed Chemical ReactionCurrent Microscale TrackingHybrid MaterialsCrystal FormationBiophysicsNanotechnologyPhysical ChemistryCrystallographyMultilayer GrowthSurface FunctionalizationSurface ChemistryNanomaterialsSurface ScienceInterfacial PhenomenaInterfacial StudyNanofabricationChemical KineticsSurface Reactivity
Current microscale tracking of chemical kinetics is limited to destructive ex situ methods. Here we utilize Ag nanocube-based plasmonic liquid marble (PLM) microreactor for in situ molecular-level identification of reaction dynamics. We exploit the ultrasensitive surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) capability imparted by the plasmonic shell to unravel the mechanism and kinetics of aryl-diazonium surface grafting reaction in situ, using just a 2-μL reaction droplet. This reaction is a robust approach to generate covalently functionalized metallic surfaces, yet its kinetics remain unknown to date. Experiments and simulations jointly uncover a two-step sequential grafting process. An initial Langmuir chemisorption of sulfonicbenzene diazonium (dSB) salt onto Ag surfaces forms an intermediate sulfonicbenzene monolayer (Ag–SB), followed by subsequent autocatalytic multilayer growth of Ag–SB3. Kinetic rate constants reveal 19-fold faster chemisorption than multilayer growth. Our ability to precisely decipher molecular-level reaction dynamics creates opportunities to develop more efficient processes in synthetic chemistry and nanotechnology.
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