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Chiral Modification of Surfaces
This project is focused on the molecular-level study of
heterogeneous catalytic processes for the manufacturing of chiral
compounds of pharmaceutical interest. Specifically, the
adsorption of chiral modifiers is being investigating as a way to
bestowing enantioselectivity to achiral surfaces. Most of our
studies up to date have been directed towards the characterization of
the adsorption of cinchona alkaloids on platinum surfaces, both under
vacuum and in-situ in solid-liquid interfaces [Z. Ma, I. Lee, J. Kubota
and F. Zaera, J. Mol. Catal. A: Chem. 216 (2004) 199]. It has
been determined from kinetic studies that heterogeneous hydrogenation
catalysts such as platinum can be made enantioselective by the use of
such molecular modifiers. In particular, alpha-ketoesters such as
ethyl pyruvate can be selectively hydrogenated by cinchona-modified
platinum catalysts to produce the corresponding optically-pure (R)- or
(S)-alpha-hydroxoesters (ethyl lactates from the pyruvate). Our
goal is to identify the underlying physical chemistry properties
controlling that behavior.
The proposed mechanism by which the cinchona is believed to exert its
effect is shown schematically below. Three functional parts have
been identified in these modifiers: (1) the anchoring quinoline
aromatic ring, the moiety believed to be responsible for adsorption to
the metal; (2) the tertiary quinuclidine ring, an amine group with a
basic nitrogen atom which facilitates complexation with the reactant;
and (3) the stereogenic region around the C8 and C9 carbon atoms
responsible for the chirality of the product. Each of these
moieties appears to play a specific role in chiral catalysis.

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The adsorption of cinchonidine from solution onto platinum
surfaces is being probed in situ by reflection-absorption infrared
spectroscopy (RAIRS). A proper assignment of the infrared absorption
bands to specific vibrational normal modes of the molecule was first
carried out by a combination of theoretical calculations and
comparisons of vibrational spectra from a number of related compounds
[W. Chu, R. J. LeBlanc, C. T. Williams, J. Kubota and F. Zaera, J. Phys
Chem. B 107 (2003) 14365]; the spectra for cinchonidine adsorbed on
platinum shown in the figure below was interpreted based on that
work. In general, in spite of the differences observed between
the IR absorption traces for neat cinchonidine versus adsorbed on
platinum, it was concluded that the room temperature adsorption of
cinchonidine from solution is molecular. Several tests were also
performed to assure that the data correspond to cinchona monolayers and
not to dissolved or condensed molecules [Z. Ma, I. Lee, J. Kubota and
F. Zaera J. Mol. Catal. A: Chem. 216 (2004) 199]. The following
was established: (1) The spectra obtained using p- and s-polarized
light display the absorption anisotropy expected from adsorbed
species. (2) Spectra taken using different liquid film thickness
do not show the increase in signal expected from dissolved
species. (3) The RAIRS spectra for surfaces saturated with
cinchonidine persist even after flushing the system with fresh solvent,
an observation that also points to the irreversibility of the
adsorption (in carbon tetrachloride). (4) No cinchona infrared
peaks are detected on oxidized platinum surfaces; only on a surface
cleaned by hydrogen pretreatments it is possible to see adsorbed
cinchonidine. (5) Repeated exposures of the surface to fresh
cinchona-saturated solutions do not lead to the growth of the infrared
absorption bands, as would be the case if they were due to physical
condensation.

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RAIRS data from platinum surfaces exposed
to 0.5 (bottom) and 1.2 (miiddle) mM cinchonidine carbon tetrachloride
solutions. The spectrum of pure cinchonidine is provided at the
top for reference. The main peaks in these spectra were assigned
by comparison of infrared and Raman data from analogous compounds as
well as by ab-initio quantum-mechanic calculations. It was
determined that the data do indeed correspond to adsorbed (not
dissolved) species, and that the adsorption is molecular.
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Next, using the surface selection rule that applies to RAIRS
for species adsorbed on metals, we were able to determine the
orientation of the aromatic ring as the cinchonidine adsorbs on
platinum substrates [J. Kubota and F. Zaera, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 123
(2001) 11115]. It was found that this geometry changes with
coverage. Specifically, three distinct adsorption regimes were
identified for this system: (1) below 5%, where no discernible
adsorption is detected in the spectra; (2) between 5 and 20%, at which
point a few weak peaks are seen suggestive of a quinoline ring lying
flat on the Pt surface; and (3) above 20%, which leads to the
collective rearrangement to a tilted geometry. What is
particularly interesting is the excellent correlation that can be drawn
between the different orientations of the species on the surface and
the variations in activity and enantioselectivity during the chiral
hydrogenation of keto esters previously reported in the literature,
also illustrated in the figure below. Maximum enantioselectivity
is obtained at the concentrations where the modifier adopts the
flat-lying adsorption geometry, that is, for cinchona-to-platinum atom
ratios around 0.1. It can be speculated that lower concentrations
are not enough to provide sufficient modifier molecules on the surface
for the chiral hydrogenation to proceed, while higher concentrations
lead to surface crowding, forcing the aromatic ring to tilt on the
surface and the catalyst to loose its enantioselective functionality.

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Signal intensities for the infrared
features at 1217 (filled circles) and 1512 cm-1 (filled squares)
associated with flat and tilted adsorption geometries, respectively, as
a function of cinchonidine concentration in a carbon tetrachloride
solution. The changes seen in these spectra correlate quite
nicely with those reported for the activity and enantioselectivity of
10,11-dihydrocinchonidine-modified platinum towards the hydrogenation
of ethyl pyruvate.
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In general, it can be concluded from our research so far that
the performance of the cinchona-modified platinum system is mainly
defined by the characteristics of the adsorption of the modifier itself
on the metal, and that those can be controlled by the conditions used
in the catalytic process. For one, optimal enantioselectivity
appears to correlate with the concentration of the modifier, as
discussed above. Also, the catalyst needs to be pre-treated with
hydrogen before the adsorption of the cinchona and the catalytic
reaction can start [Z. Ma, J. Kubota and F. Zaera, J. Catal. 219 (2003)
404]. Lastly, both the cinchona adsorption and the activity and
enantioselectivity of the cinchona/platinum system correlate well with
the polar character of the solvent and with the solubility of the
chiral modifier in it [Z. Ma and F. Zaera, J. Phys. Chem. B 109 (2005)
406]. Our next step is to determine the reasons behind the
different adsorption geometries of these cinchona. So far, our
solution NMR and theoretical work suggest that the cinchona adsorption
is defined by its molecular configuration, and that that can vary
significantly upon seemingly small changes in the periphery of the
molecular frame. This hypothesis appears to indeed explain the
difference in catalytic performance reported between the near
enantiomers cinchonidine and cinchonine. Our NMR studies suggest
that the presence of the vinyl group closer to the quinoline ring in
the latter restricts further rotations around the central C–C bonds,
and therefore forces the molecules in a less stable configuration.

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Structural details of the near
enantiomers cinchonidine and cinchonine. Highlighted here is the fact
that the vinyl group in the quinuclidine ring imposes rotational
restrictions on the latter, blocking stable configurations available to
the former. These differences may be responsible for the
differences seen in physical properties such as solubility, adsorption
and catalysis.
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The chiral modification discussed above is believed to rely on the
formation of a cinchona:reactant complex. However, chiral
modification has also been seen with smaller molecules, and it is
unlikely for those to form individual complex and force different
adsorption modes for the two enantiomers of the reactant or product of
catalysis. Instead, it has been proposed that in those cases the
chiral modifier may adsorb on the surface in an ordered supra-structure
containing void spaces with chiral properties. In order to probe
that hypothesis, the coadsorption and thermal chemistry of different
combinations of enantiopure 2-butanol and propylene oxide was
characterized on Pt(111) single-crystal surfaces [I. Lee and F. Zaera,
J. Phys. Chem. B 109 (2005) 12920]. The key results are shown in
the figure below. The formation of chiral 2-butoxide surface
superstructures, produced by thermal dehydrogenation of 2-butanol
layers, is highlighted by their difference in behavior towards the
adsorption of the two enantiomers of propylene oxide. It was
found that a significant enhancement in adsorption is possible on
surfaces with the same chirality of the probe molecule, that is, for
(R)-propylene oxide adsorption on (R)-2-butoxide layers and for
(S)-propylene oxide adsorption on (S)-2-butoxide layers. The
propylene oxide probe was found to also adsorb with the ring closer to
the surface in those cases. Finally, less butoxide decomposition
is seen at higher temperatures from the homochiral pairing, presumably
because the coadsorbed propylene oxide forces the alkoxides into a more
compact and better-packed structure on the surface.
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Propylene oxide TPD (left) and RAIRS
(right) data from titration experiments of 2-butoxide chiral layers
with enantiopure propylene oxide. The chiral 2-butoxide layers
were prepared by dosing 0.4 L of either (R)- (bottom) or (S)- (top)
2-butanol on Pt(111) at 170 K. For the TPD experiments,
(S)-propylene oxide was then adsorbed at 100 K: the data indicate an
increase of about 35% in (S)-propylene oxide uptake on the
(S)-2-butoxide layer compared to the (R)-2-butoxide case. In the
RAIRS studies the 2-butoxide layers were dosed with 2.0 L of
(R)-propylene oxide instead, but similar conclusions were
reached. Specifically, a number of differences were seen in the
ring deformation region of the spectra: the peak at 822 cm-1 due to the
monolayer is about five times more intense for the (R)-propylene
oxide/(R)-2-butoxide case.
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Researcher:
Funding:
Equipment: |
Mr. Zhen Ma, Dr. Ilkeun Lee
Department of Energy
FTIR Spectrometers, UHV Chamber #2 |
Last modified July 20, 2005
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