An original electrochemical method for assembling multilayers of terpyridine-based metallic complexes on a gold surface.

Langmuir

Département de Chimie Moléculaire, UMR-5250, Laboratoire de Chimie Inorganique Rédox, Institut de Chimie Moléculaire de Grenoble FR- CNRS-2607, Université Joseph Fourier Grenoble 1/CNRS, BP-53, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France.

Published: July 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new electrochemical method was developed to create multilayer assemblies of coordination complexes on gold surfaces, using specific complexes ([Ru(tpySH)(2)](2+) and [Fe(tpySH)(2)](2+)) for surface attachment.
  • Cyclic voltammetry revealed distinct oxidation processes for the complexes, indicating differences in their redox behavior when adsorbed on gold electrodes compared to their behavior in solution.
  • The study demonstrated successful layer-by-layer growth of the assembly due to electrochemical formation of disulfide bonds, leading to stable films that maintained consistent electrical responses over multiple cycles.

Article Abstract

A new method based on the electrochemical oxidation of thiols was used to easily generate multilayer assemblies of coordination complexes on a gold surface. For this purpose, two complexes bearing two anchoring groups for surface attachment have been prepared: [Ru(tpySH)(2)](2+) (1) and [Fe(tpySH)(2)](2+) (2) (tpySH = 4'-(2-(p-phenoxy)ethanethiol)-2,2':6',2″-terpyridine). Cyclic voltammetry of 1 in CH(3)CN exhibits two successive oxidation processes. The first is irreversible and attributed to the oxidation of the thiol substituents, whereas the second is reversible and corresponds to the 1 e(-) metal-centered oxidation. In the case of 2 both processes are superimposed. Monolayers of 1 or 2 have been formed on gold electrodes by spontaneous adsorption from micromolar solutions of the complexes in CH(3)CN. SAMs (self-assembled monolayers) exhibit redox behavior similar to the complexes in solution. The high surface coverage value obtained (Γ = 6 × 10(-10) and 4 × 10(-10) mol cm(-2) for 1 and 2, respectively) is consistent with a vertical orientation for the complexes; thus, one thiol is bound to the gold electrode, with the second unreacted thiol moiety exposed to the outer surface. Successive cyclic voltammetry induced a layer-by-layer nanostructural growth at the surface of the SAMs, and this is presumably due to the electrochemical formation of disulfide bonds, where the thiol moieties play a double role of both an anchoring group and an electroactive coupling agent. The conditions of the deposition are studied in detail. Modified electrodes containing both 1 and 2 alternatively can be easily prepared following this new approach. The film proved to be stable, displaying a similar current/voltage response for more than 10 repeating cycles in oxidation up to 0.97 V vs Ag/AgNO(3) (10(-2) M).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la301709dDOI Listing

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