Electrochemical Atomic Force Microscopy and First-Principles Calculations of Ferriprotoporphyrin Adsorption and Polymerization

被引:0
|
作者
Bennett, Jason A. [1 ]
Miller, Daniel P. [2 ]
Simpson, Scott M. [3 ]
Rodriguez, Marcela [1 ]
Zurek, Eva [2 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Behrend, Sch Sci, 4205 Coll Dr, Erie, PA 16563 USA
[2] SUNY Buffalo, Dept Chem, Buffalo, NY 14260 USA
[3] St Bonaventure Univ, Dept Chem, St Bonaventure, NY 14778 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
SIZE-SELECTIVE ELECTRODEPOSITION; MESOSCALE METAL PARTICLES; ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURE; HEMIN; REDUCTION; PORPHYRIN; FILMS; IRON; PROTOPORPHYRIN; COORDINATION;
D O I
10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b02059
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The adsorption and subsequent electrooxidative polymerization of ferriprotoporphyrin IX chloride (hemin; FePPCl) was investigated on highly ordered pyrolytic graphite, glassy carbon, and polycrystalline Pt electrodes using electrochemical atomic force microscopy, first-principles calculations, and cyclic voltammetry. Hemin was shown to readily adsorb to all three surfaces; however, it was more continuous over the carbon surfaces compared to the Pt surface. This disparity in adsorption appears to be a major contributing factor to differences observed between the electrodes following hemin electropolymerization. Despite differences in roughness and morphology, hemin polymerized as a continuous layer over each electrode surface. Periodic density functional theory calculations were used to model FePP (without Cl) on both the Pt(111) and graphite surfaces using the vdW-DF-optPBE functional to account for the dispersion interactions. Our calculations suggest that the FePP molecule chemisorbs to the Pt surface while at the same time exhibiting intramolecular hydrogen bonding between the carboxylic acid groups, which are extended away from the surface. In contrast to FePP-Pt chemisorption, FePP was found to physisorb to graphite. The preferred spin state upon adsorption was found to be S = 2 on Pt(111), whereas on graphite, the high and intermediate spin states were nearly isoenergetic. Additionally, gas-phase calculations suggest that much of the surface roughness observed microscopically for the polymerized porphyrin layer may originate from the nonparallel stacking of porphyrin molecules, which interact with each other by forming four intermolecular hydrogen bonds and through dispersion interactions between the stacked porphyrin rings. Regardless of polymer thickness, the underlying electrode appears to be able to participate in at least some redox processes. This was observed for the hemin-polymerized Pt electrode using the 2H(+)/H-2 redox couple and was suspected to be due to some Pt surface atoms not being specifically coordinated to the hemin molecules and therefore available to react with H+ that was small enough to diffuse through the polymer layer.
引用
收藏
页码:11335 / 11346
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Determining charge state of graphene vacancy by noncontact atomic force microscopy and first-principles calculations
    Liu, Y.
    Weinert, M.
    Li, L.
    NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2015, 26 (03)
  • [2] Efficient First-Principles Simulation of Noncontact Atomic Force Microscopy for Structural Analysis
    Chan, T. -L.
    Wang, C. Z.
    Ho, K. M.
    Chelikowsky, James R.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2009, 102 (17)
  • [3] Prospects for Resolving Chemical Structure by Atomic Force Microscopy: A First-Principles Study
    Guo, Chun-Sheng
    Van Hove, Michel A.
    Zhang, Rui-Qin
    Minot, Christian
    LANGMUIR, 2010, 26 (21) : 16271 - 16277
  • [4] First-Principles Atomic Force Microscopy Image Simulations with Density Embedding Theory
    Sakai, Yuki
    Lee, Alex J.
    Chelikowsky, James R.
    NANO LETTERS, 2016, 16 (05) : 3242 - 3246
  • [5] Seeing the atomic orbital: First-principles study of the effect of tip termination on atomic force microscopy
    Huang, MH
    Cuma, M
    Liu, F
    PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2003, 90 (25)
  • [6] Unraveling roles of lead ions in selective flotation of scheelite and fluorite from atomic force microscopy and first-principles calculations
    He, Jianyong
    Sun, Wei
    Zeng, Hongbo
    Fan, Ruihua
    Hu, Wenjihao
    Gao, Zhiyong
    Minerals Engineering, 2022, 179
  • [7] Unraveling roles of lead ions in selective flotation of scheelite and fluorite from atomic force microscopy and first-principles calculations
    He, Jianyong
    Sun, Wei
    Zeng, Hongbo
    Fan, Ruihua
    Hu, Wenjihao
    Gao, Zhiyong
    MINERALS ENGINEERING, 2022, 179
  • [8] Modeling atomic force microscopy at LiNbO3 surfaces from first-principles
    Sanna, S.
    Dues, C.
    Schmidt, W. G.
    COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE, 2015, 103 : 145 - 150
  • [9] First-principles calculations of magnetism of Fe atomic sheet
    Gao Tan-Hua
    Lu Dao-Ming
    Wu Shun-Qing
    Zhu Zi-Zhong
    ACTA PHYSICA SINICA, 2011, 60 (04)
  • [10] First-Principles Calculations of Sarin Adsorption on Anatase Surfaces
    Le, Nam Q.
    Ekuma, Chinedu E.
    Dunlap, Brett I.
    Gunlycke, Daniel
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 2018, 122 (05): : 2832 - 2839