Abstract
Ligand-stabilized, atomically precise gold nanoclusters with a metal core of a uniform size of just 1-3 nm constitute an interesting class of nanomaterials with versatile possibilities for applications due to their size-dependent properties and modifiable ligand layers. The key to extending the usability of the clusters in applications is to understand the chemical bonding in the ligand layer as a function of cluster size and ligand structure. Previously, it has been shown that monodispersed gold nanoclusters, stabilized by meta-mercaptobenzoic acid (m-MBA or 3-MBA) ligands and with sizes of 68-144 gold atoms, show ambient stability. Here we show that a combination of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, UV-vis absorption, infrared spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulations, and density functional theory calculations reveals a distinct chemistry in the ligand layer, absent in other known thiol-stabilized gold nanoclusters. Our results imply a low-symmetry C1 ligand layer of 3-MBA around the gold core of Au68 and Au144 and suggest that 3-MBA protects the metal core not only by the covalent S-Au bond formation but also via weak π-Au and O═C-OH···Au interactions. The π-Au and -OH···Au interactions have a strength of the order of a hydrogen bond and thus are dynamic in water at ambient temperature. The -OH···Au interaction was identified by a distinct carbonyl stretch frequency that is distinct for 3-MBA-protected gold clusters, but is missing in the previously studied Au102(p-MBA)44 cluster. These thiol-gold interactions can be used to explain a remarkably low ligand density on the surface of the metal core of these clusters. Our results lay a foundation to understand functionalization of atomically precise ligand-stabilized gold nanoclusters via a route where weak ligand-metal interfacial interactions are sacrificed for covalent bonding.
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