Chlorination and Oxygenation of Carbon Electrodes for Covalent Attachment of Thiol-Terminated Molecules

25 September 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

This study investigated the reactivity of two carbon electrodes (glassy carbon - GC and carbon powder - CP), with iodine monochloride for surface chlorination and subsequent covalent attachment of thiol-terminated molecules, (6-mercaptohexyl)ferrocene and benzene-1,2,4,5-tetrathiol. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis revealed that the iodine monochloride treatment resulted in chlorination and iodination of both carbon electrodes, with post-reaction GC exhibiting significant Cl:C ratios. However, chlorination of either carbon electrode did not enhance reactivity with thiol-terminated molecules. For GC, inherent or anodized surface oxide groups were found to be equally effective for covalent attachment of thiol-terminated molecules through Michael addition as chlorine-termination through nucleophilic aromatic substitution. In contrast, CP, despite its lower surface reactivity, could directly tether (6-mercaptohexyl)ferrocene without pretreatment or chlorination. Furthermore, a tetrathiolate bridge was successfully employed to covalently attach a molybdenum complex to anodized GC.

Keywords

Carbon electrode modifications
glassy carbon
carbon black powder
chlorination
alkanethiols
aromatic thiols

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Supporting Information for Chlorination and Oxygenation of Carbon Electrodes for Covalent Attachment of Thiol-Terminated Molecules
Description
X-ray photoelectron survey and high-resolution spectra, IR spectra, cyclic voltammograms, and X-ray absorption spectrum of modified glassy carbon and carbon powder; UV-Vis spectra, IR spectrum, NMR spectrum, crystal data, X-ray absorption spectra and cyclic voltammograms of molybdenum model compounds and precursor
Actions
Title
CIF file for [MoOCl2(bdt)][PPh4] single crystal
Description
CIF file for [MoOCl2(bdt)][PPh4] single crystal
Actions

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