posted on 2023-03-06, 22:14authored byLaura
A. Cramer, Amanda Larson, Avery S. Daniels, E. Charles H. Sykes, Andrew J. Gellman
Recent experiments have demonstrated an intriguing phenomenon
in
which adsorption of a nonracemic mixture of aspartic acid (Asp) enantiomers
onto an achiral Cu(111) metal surface leads to autoamplification of
surface enantiomeric excess, ees, to values
well above those of the impinging gas mixtures, eeg. This is particularly interesting because it demonstrates
that a slightly nonracemic mixture of enantiomers can be further purified
simply by adsorption onto an achiral surface. In this work, we seek
a deeper understanding of this phenomena and apply scanning tunneling
microscopy to image the overlayer structures formed by mixed monolayers
of d- and l-Asp on Cu(111) over the full range of
surface enantiomeric excess; ees = −1
(pure l-Asp) through ees = 0
(racemic dl-Asp) to ees = 1 (pure d-Asp). Both enantiomers of three chiral monolayer structures
are observed. One is a conglomerate (enantiomerically pure), another
is a racemate (equimolar mixture of d- and l-Asp);
however, the third structure accommodates both enantiomers in a 2:1
ratio. Such solid phases of enantiomer mixtures with nonracemic composition
are rare in 3D crystals of enantiomers. We argue that, in 2D, the
formation of chiral defects in a lattice of one enantiomer is easier
than in 3D, simply because the stress associated with the chiral defect
in a 2D monolayer of the opposite enantiomer can be dissipated by
strain into the space above the surface.