| Literature DB >> 25671148 |
Yit Lung Khung1, Siti Hawa Ngalim2, Andrea Scaccabarozzi1, Dario Narducci1.
Abstract
In this letter, we report results of a hydrosilylation carried out on bifunctional molecules by using two different approaches, namely through thermal treatment and photochemical treatment through UV irradiation. Previously, our group also demonstrated that in a mixed alkyne/alcohol solution, surface coupling is biased towards the formation of Si-O-C linkages instead of Si-C linkages, thus indirectly supporting the kinetic model of hydrogen abstraction from the Si-H surface (Khung, Y. L. et al. Chem. - Eur. J. 2014, 20, 15151-15158). To further examine the probability of this kinetic model we compare the results from reactions with bifunctional alkynes carried out under thermal treatment (<130 °C) and under UV irradiation, respectively. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and contact angle measurements showed that under thermal conditions, the Si-H surface predominately reacts to form Si-O-C bonds from ethynylbenzyl alcohol solution while the UV photochemical route ensures that the alcohol-based alkyne may also form Si-C bonds, thus producing a monolayer of mixed linkages. The results suggested the importance of surface radicals as well as the type of terminal group as being essential towards directing the nature of surface linkage.Entities:
Keywords: UV-initated hydrosilylation; X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy; hydrogen abstraction; thermal hydrosilylation
Year: 2015 PMID: 25671148 PMCID: PMC4311582 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.6.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Hypothetical reaction pathways of ethynylbenzyl alcohol and trifluroalkyne during thermal and UV-initiated hydrosilyation.
Figure 2High-resolution XPS Si 2p spectra of the surface (a) thermally functionalized with trifluoroalkyne, (b) functionalized with trifluoroalkyne through UV-irradiation, (c) thermally functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol and (d) functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol though UV-irradiation.
Figure 3High-resolution XPS C 1s spectra of surfaces (a) thermally functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol and (b) functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol through UV initiation.
Figure 4High-resolution XPS O 1s spectra of surfaces (a) thermally functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol and (b) functionalized with ethynylbenzyl alcohol through UV irradiation.
Sessile droplet contact angle measurements of the two surfaces hydrosilylated with the two alkynes. The atomic concentration (atom %) from XPS survey spectra is also as listed below for the two different reaction mechanisms.
| contact angle | ||||
| thermal hydrosilylation | UV-inititated hydrosilylation | |||
| (84.0 ± 1.5)° | (83.5 ± 0.5)° | |||
| (89.6 ± 3.0)° | (67.4 ± 4.1)° | |||
| atomic concentration (atom %) after thermal hydrosilylation | ||||
| C 1s | Si 2p | O 1s | F 1s | |
| 14.63 | 66.18 | 15.21 | 3.97 | |
| 68.32 | 15.40 | 16.19 | — | |
| atomic concentration (atom %) after UV-initiated hydrosilylation | ||||
| C 1s | Si 2p | O 1s | F 1s | |
| 14.21 | 50.39 | 32.18 | 3.22 | |
| 19.13 | 34.72 | 48.15 | — | |