Abstract
The plasmon-driven dimerization of 4-nitrothiophenol (4NTP) to 4-4’-dimercaptoazobenzene
(DMAB) has become a testbed for understanding bimolecular photoreactions enhanced by nanoscale
metals, in particular, regarding the relevance of electron transfer and heat transfer from the metal to
the molecule. By adding a methylene group between the thiol bond and the nitrophenyl, we add
structural flexibility to the reactant molecule. Time-resolved surface-enhanced Raman-spectroscopy
proves that this (4-nitrobenzyl)mercaptan (4NBM) molecule has a larger dimerization rate and
dimerization yield than 4NTP and higher selectivity towards dimerization. X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations show that the electron transfer would prefer
activation of 4NTP over 4NBM. We conclude that the rate limiting step of this plasmonic reaction is
the dimerization step, which is dramatically enhanced by the additional flexibility of the reactant. This
study may serve as an example for using nanoscale metals to simultaneously provide charge carriers for bond activation and localized heat for driving bimolecular reaction steps. The molecular structure
of reactants can be tuned to control the reaction kinetics.
Supplementary materials
Title
SI Computational Details and Results(3)
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