Self-Metalation of Porphyrins at the Solid-Gas Interface

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2021 Dec 1;60(49):25988-25993. doi: 10.1002/anie.202111932. Epub 2021 Nov 9.

Abstract

Self-metalation is a promising route to include a single metal atom in a tetrapyrrolic macrocycle in organic frameworks supported by metal surfaces. The molecule-surface interaction may provide the charge transfer and the geometric distortion of the molecular plane necessary for metal inclusion. However, at a metal surface the presence of an activation barrier can represent an obstacle that cannot be compensated by a higher substrate temperature without affecting the layer integrity. The formation of the intermediate state can be facilitated in some cases by oxygen pre-adsorption at the supporting metal surface, like in the case of 2H-TPP/Pd(100). In such cases, the activation barrier can be overcome by mild annealing, yielding the formation of desorbing products and of the metalated tetrapyrrole. We show here that the self-metalation of 2H-TPP at the Pd(100) surface can be promoted already at room temperature by the presence of an oxygen gas phase at close-to-ambient conditions via an Eley-Rideal mechanism.

Keywords: near-ambient pressure; porphyrins; self-metalation; sitting-atop complex; tetrapyrroles.