Abstract

The thermally induced cyclodehydrofluorization of iron tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)porphyrin proceeded highly stereoselectively to give a prochiral product on a gold surface in an ultrahigh vacuum, whereas dehydrocyclization of the respective iron tetrakisphenylporphyrin did not show such selectivity. Stereoselectivity was predominantly observed for closely packed layers, which is an indication of intermolecular cooperativity and steric constraints induced by adjacent species. Density functional theory identified intermolecular packing constraints as the origin of such selectivity during the reaction. Scanning tunneling microscopy revealed the formation of an enantiomerically pure two-dimensional self-assembly as a conglomerate of mirror domains. On-surface two-dimensional topochemistry, as reported herein, may open new routes for stereoselective synthesis.

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