Abstract
Diazonium salts of two nitro-substituted polycyclic aromatic compounds were synthesized and their spontaneous covalent attachment onto amorphous carbon surfaces was studied via electrochemical and spectroscopic techniques. In situ spectroscopic monitoring of the grafting of these compounds at amorphous carbon surfaces via attenuated total internal reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) highlighted a marked difference in adsorption rates, which was also evident via ex situ electrochemical analysis. We show that adsorption rate differences cannot be explained based on differences in the solvolysis rates of these two molecules. It was found instead that the relative position of the –N2+ groups with respect to the –NO2 groups affected the reduction potential of the diazonium cations and in turn their adsorption rate at amorphous carbon surfaces. We conclude that differences in the electron density at the carbon atom bound to the diazonium group are responsible for the differences observed in the spontaneous attachment at carbon.
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