Paper SS-WeA3
Exploring Enantioselectivity on Chirally Modified Surfaces in Ultrahigh Vacuum
Wednesday, November 12, 2014, 3:00 pm, Room 309
The mode of operation of heterogeneous chiral modifiers can be classified into those operating as templates, where several modifier molecules act in concert to define a chiral adsorption site, or one-to-one modifiers that form a docking complex between the modifier and a prochiral reactant. Enantioselectivity is measured by adsorbing chiral probe molecules onto chirally modified surfaces. Templating is illustrated using amino acids on Pd(111). Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) reveals that some amino acids form tetrameric units, and others form dimers. Only those amino acids that form tetramers are enantioselective implying that the tetramers act as templates. Naphthylethylamine (NEA) is proposed to acts as a one-to-one modifier. The interaction between NEA and a prochiral reactant, methyl pyruvate, is explored using STM. Possible docking complexes are identified using density functional theory and the simulated images are compared with experimental images.