Tracking interfacial single-molecule pH and binding dynamics via vibrational spectroscopy

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Abstract

Understanding single-molecule chemical dynamics of surface ligands is of critical importance to reveal their individual pathways and, hence, roles in catalysis, which ensemble measurements cannot see. Here, we use a cascaded nano-optics approach that provides sufficient enhancement to enable direct tracking of chemical trajectories of single surface-bound molecules via vibrational spectroscopy. Atomic protrusions are laser-induced within plasmonic nanojunctions to concentrate light to atomic length scales, optically isolating individual molecules. By stabilizing these atomic sites, we unveil single-molecule deprotonation and binding dynamics under ambient conditions. High-speed field-enhanced spectroscopy allows us to monitor chemical switching of a single carboxylic group between three discrete states. Combining this with theoretical calculation identifies reversible proton transfer dynamics (yielding effective single-molecule pH) and switching between molecule-metal coordination states, where the exact chemical pathway depends on the intitial protonation state. These findings open new domains to explore interfacial single-molecule mechanisms and optical manipulation of their reaction pathways.

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Huang, J., Grys, D. B., Griffiths, J., de Nijs, B., Kamp, M., Lin, Q., & Baumberg, J. J. (2021). Tracking interfacial single-molecule pH and binding dynamics via vibrational spectroscopy. Science Advances, 7(23). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abg1790

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