Abstract

On-surface synthesis via covalent coupling of adsorbed molecules on metal surfaces has attracted significant attention recently due to its potential to fabricate low-dimensional carbon materials with atomic precision. The bottom-up, atomically precise synthesis of carbon nanostructures enables the tailoring of their electronic properties at a molecular level. To understand and control the surface-chemistry-driven synthesis, many efforts have been made to design innovative precursors, explore novel reaction schemes, and utilize templating effects from the substrate.My presentation focuses on high-resolution scanning probe microscopy experiments combined with density functional theory to demonstrate recent highlights on the assembly of surface-supported low-dimensional carbon structures on metal surfaces. First, the assembly and electronic structure of planar π-extended cycloparaphenylene macrocycles, representing the first nanographene with an all-armchair edge topology, will be presented [1]. The second part will discuss the bottom-up synthesis of covalently-linked non-planar carbon ribbons and their electronic properties depending on their adsorption geometry. Finally, I will conclude with the on-surface cyclomerization of oxygen heterocycles to understand the on-surface synthesis of furan and pyran derivatives from ketone-functionalized precursors on metal surfaces.[1] Xiang, et al. Nature Chem., 2022 14, 871–876.

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