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Metastable Brominated Nanodiamond Surface Enables Room Temperature and Catalysis-Free Amine Chemistry

Authors :
Cynthia Melendrez
Jorge A. Lopez-Rosas
Camron X. Stokes
Tsz Ching Cheung
Sang-Jun Lee
Charles James Titus
Jocelyn Valenzuela
Grace Jeanpierre
Halim Muhammad
Polo Tran
Perla Jasmine Sandoval
Tyanna Supreme
Virginia Altoe
Jan Vavra
Helena Raabova
Vaclav Vanek
Sami Sainio
William B. Doriese
Galen C. O’Neil
Daniel S. Swetz
Joel N. Ullom
Kent Irwin
Dennis Nordlund
Petr Cigler
Abraham Wolcott
Source :
The journal of physical chemistry letters. 13(4)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Bromination of high-pressure, high-temperature (HPHT) nanodiamond (ND) surfaces has not been explored and can open new avenues for increased chemical reactivity and diamond lattice covalent bond formation. The large bond dissociation energy of the diamond lattice-oxygen bond is a challenge that prevents new bonds from forming, and most researchers simply use oxygen-terminated NDs (alcohols and acids) as reactive species. In this work, we transformed a tertiary-alcohol-rich ND surface to an amine surface with ∼50% surface coverage and was limited by the initial rate of bromination. We observed that alkyl bromide moieties are highly labile on HPHT NDs and are metastable as previously found using density functional theory. The strong leaving group properties of the alkyl bromide intermediate were found to form diamond-nitrogen bonds at room temperature and without catalysts. This robust pathway to activate a chemically inert ND surface broadens the modalities for surface termination, and the unique surface properties of brominated and aminated NDs are impactful to researchers for chemically tuning diamond for quantum sensing or biolabeling applications.

Details

ISSN :
19487185
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of physical chemistry letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b2c79e1d19ba66148870a073ad7ad85