Abstract

Rationally designed halogenated hydrocarbons are widely used building blocks to fabricate covalent-bonded carbon nanostructures on surfaces through a reaction pathway involving generation and dissociation of organometallic intermediates and irreversible covalent bond formation. Here, we provide a comprehensive picture of the on-surface-assisted homocoupling reaction of 1,3-bis(2-bromoethynyl)benzene on Au(111), aiming for the synthesis of graphdiyne nanostructures. Submolecular resolution scanning tunneling microscopy and noncontact atomic force microscopy observations identify the organometallic intermediates and their self-assemblies formed in the dehalogenation process. The demetallization of the organometallic intermediates at increased temperatures produces butadiyne moieties that spontaneously formed two different covalent structures ( i.e., graphdiyne zigzag chains and macrocycles), whose ratio was found to depend on the initial coverage of organometallic intermediates. At the optimal condition, the stepwise demetallization and cyclization led to a high-yield production of graphdiyne macrocycles up to 95%. Statistical analysis and theoretical calculations suggested that the favored formation of macrocycles resulted from the complex interplay between thermodynamic and kinetic processes involving the organometallic bonded intermediates and the covalently bonded butadiyne moieties.

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