Metal
carbenes are key intermediates in a plethora of homogeneous
and heterogeneous catalytic processes. However, despite their importance
to heterogeneous catalysis, the influence of surface attachment on
carbene reactivity has not yet been explored. Here, we reveal the
interactions of fluorenylidene (FY), an archetypical aromatic carbene
of extreme reactivity, with a Ag(111) surface. For the first time,
the interaction of a highly reactive carbene with a metal surface
could be studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). FY chemisorbs
on Ag(111) with an estimated desorption energy of 3 eV, forming a
surface bound silver–carbene complex. The surface interaction
leads to a switching of the electronic ground state of FY from triplet
to singlet, and to controlled chemical reactivity. This atomistic
understanding of the interplay between carbenes and metal surfaces
opens the way for the development of novel classes of catalytic systems
based on surface metal carbenes.