Song YangAmanda S. HarperRoyce W. Murray
This paper describes the effects of oxidative electronic charging of the Au cores of the monolayer-protected clusters (MPCs), Au140(S(CH2)5CH3)53 and Au38(SCH2CH2Ph)24, on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of their monolayer ligand shells. Previously unresolved fine structure in the 13C NMR hexanethiolate methyl and C5 methylene resonances is seen in spectra of solutions of monodisperse Au140(S(CH2)5CH3)53 MPCs, reflecting magnetically inequivalent ligand sites. Incremented increases in positive cluster core charge, effected by electrochemical charging, cause the spectral fine structure of the methyl resonance to coalesce, becoming a single peak at the Au140(3+) charge state. The spectral changes are reversible; charging back to the original core charge state regenerates the methyl 13C resonance fine structure. Adding an equimolar quantity of a Au(I) thiolate complex, Au(I)[SCH2(C6H4)C(CH3)3], to an uncharged Au140(S(CH2)5CH3)53 MPC solution in d2-methylene chloride causes partial spectral coalescence. 13C NMR spectra of Au38(SCH2CH2Ph)24 MPCs exhibit roughly comparable spectral changes upon positive core charging to the '0', '+1', and '+2' states. The NMR results indicate that exchange between magnetically inequivalent sites occurs at rates of 100 to 400 s(-1), a rate believed to be too fast to be accountable by actual exchanges of ligands between different sites on the Au core. We also describe changes in core electronic spectra of Au140(S(CH2)5CH3)53 induced by positive charging, measured using spectroelectrochemistry.
Yang Song (1235364)Amanda S. Harper (2536693)Royce W. Murray (1270353)
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