posted on 2021-04-01, 22:51authored byKun Feng, Ephrath Solel, Peter R. Schreiner, Harald Fuchs, Hong-Ying Gao
We
report the on-surface chemistry of diamantanethiols on metal
surfaces by combining low-temperature STM studies with quantum mechanical
density functional theory computations. First, we examined the spatial
configurations of diamantanethiols on metal surfaces, in which the
thiol-substrate confinement plays a key role. We then thermally desorbed
the diamantanethiols from the substrate surfaces to determine whether
the C–S or S–metal bonds preferentially break. Finally,
we explored diamantane-4,9-dithiol and its polymerization on metal
surfaces, forming linear nanodiamond disulfur chains. This work broadens
the fundamental knowledge of functionalized diamondoid behavior on
surfaces and provides a novel approach to link diamantane as necklace-chain
nanodiamond hybrid materials.