Felix R. Fischer

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Name: Fischer, Felix R.
Organization: University of California Berkeley , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry
Title: (PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Hyangsoo Jeong, Stephen von Kugelgen, Donatela Bellone, and Felix R. Fischer
Journal of the American Chemical Society November 1, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 43) pp:15509-15509
Publication Date(Web):October 6, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b09390
Alkyne cross-metathesis of molybdenum carbyne complex [TolC≡Mo(OCCH3(CF3)2)3]·DME with 2 equiv of functional ynamines or ynamides yields the primary cross-metathesis product with high regioselectivity (>98%) along with a molybdenum metallacyclobutadiene complex. NMR and X-ray crystal structure analysis reveals that ynamides derived from 1-(phenylethynyl)pyrrolidin-2-one selectively cleave the propagating molybdenum species in the ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization (ROAMP) of ring-strained 3,8-dihexyloxy-5,6-dihydro-11,12-didehydrodibenzo[a,e][8]annulene and irreversibly deactivate the diamagnetic molybdenum metallacyclobutadiene complex through a multidentate chelate binding mode. The chain termination of living ROAMP with substituted ethynylpyrrolidin-2-ones selectively transfers a functional end-group to the polymer chain, giving access to telechelic polymers. This regioselective carbyne transfer strategy gives access to amphiphilic block copolymers through synthetic cascades of ROAMP followed by ring-opening polymerization of strained ε-caprolactone.
Co-reporter:Cameron Rogers, Wade S. Perkins, Gregory Veber, Teresa E. Williams, Ryan R. Cloke, and Felix R. Fischer
Journal of the American Chemical Society March 22, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 11) pp:4052-4052
Publication Date(Web):February 24, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b12217
Regulating the complex environment accounting for the stability, selectivity, and activity of catalytic metal nanoparticle interfaces represents a challenge to heterogeneous catalyst design. Here we demonstrate the intrinsic performance enhancement of a composite material composed of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) embedded in a bottom-up synthesized graphene nanoribbon (GNR) matrix for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2. Electrochemical studies reveal that the structural and electronic properties of the GNR composite matrix increase the AuNP electrochemically active surface area (ECSA), lower the requisite CO2 reduction overpotential by hundreds of millivolts (catalytic onset > −0.2 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE)), increase the Faraday efficiency (>90%), markedly improve stability (catalytic performance sustained over >24 h), and increase the total catalytic output (>100-fold improvement over traditional amorphous carbon AuNP supports). The inherent structural and electronic tunability of bottom-up synthesized GNR-AuNP composites affords an unrivaled degree of control over the catalytic environment, providing a means for such profound effects as shifting the rate-determining step in the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO, and thereby altering the electrocatalytic mechanism at the nanoparticle surface.
Co-reporter:Stephen von Kugelgen, Renee Sifri, Donatela Bellone, and Felix R. Fischer
Journal of the American Chemical Society June 7, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 22) pp:7577-7577
Publication Date(Web):May 17, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b02225
Regioselective carbyne-transfer reagents derived from (3,3,3-trifluoroprop-1-yn-1-yl)benzene give access to functionalized ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization (ROAMP) initiators [R-C6H4C≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] featuring electron-donating or -withdrawing substituents on the benzylidyne. Kinetic studies and linear free-energy relationships reveal that the initiation step of the ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization of 5,6,11,12-tetradehydrobenzo[a,e][8]annulene exhibits a moderate positive Hammett reaction constant (ρ = +0.36). ROAMP catalysts featuring electron-withdrawing benzylidynes not only selectively increase the rate of initiation (ki) over the rate of propagation (kp) but also prevent undesired intra- and intermolecular chain-transfer processes, giving access to linear poly-(o-phenylene ethynylene) with narrow molecular weight distribution. The regioselective carbyne transfer methodology and the detailed mechanistic insight enabled the design of a bifunctional ROAMP-reversible addition–fragmentation chain-transfer (RAFT) initiator complex. ROAMP followed by RAFT polymerization yields hybrid poly-(o-phenylene ethynylene)-block-poly-(methyl acrylate) block copolymers.
Co-reporter:Christopher Bronner, Tomas Marangoni, Daniel J. Rizzo, Rebecca A. Durr, Jakob Holm Jørgensen, Felix R. Fischer, and Michael F. Crommie
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C August 31, 2017 Volume 121(Issue 34) pp:18490-18490
Publication Date(Web):August 8, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b02896
Deterministic bottom-up approaches for synthesizing atomically well-defined graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) largely rely on the surface-catalyzed activation of selected labile bonds in a molecular precursor followed by step-growth polymerization and cyclodehydrogenation. While the majority of successful GNR precursors rely on the homolytic cleavage of thermally labile C–Br bonds, the introduction of weaker C–I bonds provides access to monomers that can be polymerized at significantly lower temperatures, thus helping to increase the flexibility of the GNR synthesis process. Scanning tunneling microscopy imaging of molecular precursors, activated intermediates, and polymers resulting from stepwise thermal annealing of both Br and I substituted precursors for chevron GNRs reveals that the polymerization of both precursors proceeds at similar temperatures on Au(111). This surprising observation is consistent with diffusion-controlled polymerization of the surface-stabilized radical intermediates that emerge from homolytic cleavage of either the C–Br or the C–I bonds.
Co-reporter:Stephen von Kugelgen; Donatela E. Bellone; Ryan R. Cloke; Wade S. Perkins
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 19) pp:6234-6239
Publication Date(Web):April 27, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b02422
Molybdenum carbyne complexes [RC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] featuring a mesityl (R = Mes) or an ethyl (R = Et) substituent initiate the living ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization of the strained cyclic alkyne, 5,6,11,12-tetradehydrobenzo[a,e][8]annulene, to yield fully conjugated poly(o-phenylene ethynylene). The difference in the steric demand of the polymer end-group (Mes vs Et) transferred during the initiation step determines the topology of the resulting polymer chain. While [MesC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] exclusively yields linear poly(o-phenylene ethynylene), polymerization initiated by [EtC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] results in cyclic polymers ranging in size from n = 5 to 20 monomer units. Kinetic studies reveal that the propagating species emerging from [EtC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] undergoes a highly selective intramolecular backbiting into the butynyl end-group.
Co-reporter:Giang D. Nguyen
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2016 Volume 120(Issue 5) pp:2684-2687
Publication Date(Web):January 20, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.5b09986
Substitutional doping of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) with heteroatoms is a principal strategy to fine-tune the electronic structure of GNRs for future device applications. Here, we report the fabrication and nanoscale characterization of atomically precise N = 13 armchair GNRs featuring regioregular edge-doping with sulfur atoms (S-13-AGNRs) on a Au(111) surface. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy and first-principle calculations reveal modification of the electronic structure of S-13-AGNRs when compared to undoped N = 13 AGNRs.
Co-reporter:Ryan R. Cloke; Tomas Marangoni; Giang D. Nguyen; Trinity Joshi; Daniel J. Rizzo; Christopher Bronner; Ting Cao; Steven G. Louie; Michael F. Crommie
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 28) pp:8872-8875
Publication Date(Web):July 8, 2015
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b02523
A fundamental requirement for the development of advanced electronic device architectures based on graphene nanoribbon (GNR) technology is the ability to modulate the band structure and charge carrier concentration by substituting specific carbon atoms in the hexagonal graphene lattice with p- or n-type dopant heteroatoms. Here we report the atomically precise introduction of group III dopant atoms into bottom-up fabricated semiconducting armchair GNRs (AGNRs). Trigonal-planar B atoms along the backbone of the GNR share an empty p-orbital with the extended π-band for dopant functionality. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) topography reveals a characteristic modulation of the local density of states along the backbone of the GNR that is superimposable with the expected position and concentration of dopant B atoms. First-principles calculations support the experimental findings and provide additional insight into the band structure of B-doped 7-AGNRs.
Co-reporter:Alexander Riss, Sebastian Wickenburg, Patrick Gorman, Liang Z. Tan, Hsin-Zon Tsai, Dimas G. de Oteyza, Yen-Chia Chen, Aaron J. Bradley, Miguel M. Ugeda, Grisha Etkin, Steven G. Louie, Felix R. Fischer, and Michael F. Crommie
Nano Letters 2014 Volume 14(Issue 5) pp:2251-2255
Publication Date(Web):January 3, 2014
DOI:10.1021/nl403791q
Semiconducting π-conjugated polymers have attracted significant interest for applications in light-emitting diodes, field-effect transistors, photovoltaics, and nonlinear optoelectronic devices. Central to the success of these functional organic materials is the facile tunability of their electrical, optical, and magnetic properties along with easy processability and the outstanding mechanical properties associated with polymeric structures. In this work we characterize the chemical and electronic structure of individual chains of oligo-(E)-1,1′-bi(indenylidene), a polyacetylene derivative that we have obtained through cooperative C1–C5 thermal enediyne cyclizations on Au(111) surfaces followed by a step-growth polymerization of the (E)-1,1′-bi(indenylidene) diradical intermediates. We have determined the combined structural and electronic properties of this class of oligomers by characterizing the atomically precise chemical structure of individual monomer building blocks and oligomer chains (via noncontact atomic force microscopy (nc-AFM)), as well as by imaging their localized and extended molecular orbitals (via scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/STS)). Our combined structural and electronic measurements reveal that the energy associated with extended π-conjugated states in these oligomers is significantly lower than the energy of the corresponding localized monomer orbitals, consistent with theoretical predictions.
Co-reporter:Donatela E. Bellone; Justin Bours; Elisabeth H. Menke
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 Volume 137(Issue 2) pp:850-856
Publication Date(Web):December 23, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja510919v
The pseudo-octahedral molybdenum benzylidyne complex [TolC≡Mo(ONO)(OR)]·KOR (R = CCH3(CF3)2) 1, featuring a stabilizing ONO pincer ligand, initiates the controlled living polymerization of strained dibenzocyclooctynes at T > 60 °C to give high molecular weight polymers with exceptionally low polydispersities (PDI ∼ 1.02). Kinetic analyses reveal that the growing polymer chain attached to the propagating catalyst efficiently limits the rate of propagation with respect to the rate of initiation (kp/ki ∼ 10–3). The reversible coordination of KOCCH3(CF3)2 to the propagating catalyst prevents undesired chain-termination and -transfer processes. The ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization with 1 has all the characteristics of a living polymerization and enables, for the first time, the controlled synthesis of amphiphilic block copolymers via ROAMP.
Co-reporter:Alexander Riss, Sebastian Wickenburg, Liang Z. Tan, Hsin-Zon Tsai, Youngkyou Kim, Jiong Lu, Aaron J. Bradley, Miguel M. Ugeda, Kacey L. Meaker, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Alex Zettl, Felix R. Fischer, Steven G. Louie, and Michael F. Crommie
ACS Nano 2014 Volume 8(Issue 6) pp:5395
Publication Date(Web):April 18, 2014
DOI:10.1021/nn501459v
Gate-controlled tuning of the charge carrier density in graphene devices provides new opportunities to control the behavior of molecular adsorbates. We have used scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy (STS) to show how the vibronic electronic levels of 1,3,5-tris(2,2-dicyanovinyl)benzene molecules adsorbed onto a graphene/BN/SiO2 device can be tuned via application of a backgate voltage. The molecules are observed to electronically decouple from the graphene layer, giving rise to well-resolved vibronic states in dI/dV spectroscopy at the single-molecule level. Density functional theory (DFT) and many-body spectral function calculations show that these states arise from molecular orbitals coupled strongly to carbon–hydrogen rocking modes. Application of a back-gate voltage allows switching between different electronic states of the molecules for fixed sample bias.Keywords: density functional theory; graphene; GW self-energy; organic molecules; scanning tunneling microscopy; scanning tunneling spectroscopy; vibronic levels
Co-reporter:Yen-Chia Chen, Dimas G. de Oteyza, Zahra Pedramrazi, Chen Chen, Felix R. Fischer, and Michael F. Crommie
ACS Nano 2013 Volume 7(Issue 7) pp:6123
Publication Date(Web):June 9, 2013
DOI:10.1021/nn401948e
A prerequisite for future graphene nanoribbon (GNR) applications is the ability to fine-tune the electronic band gap of GNRs. Such control requires the development of fabrication tools capable of precisely controlling width and edge geometry of GNRs at the atomic scale. Here we report a technique for modifying GNR band gaps via covalent self-assembly of a new species of molecular precursors that yields n = 13 armchair GNRs, a wider GNR than those previously synthesized using bottom-up molecular techniques. Scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy reveal that these n = 13 armchair GNRs have a band gap of 1.4 eV, 1.2 eV smaller than the gap determined previously for n = 7 armchair GNRs. Furthermore, we observe a localized electronic state near the end of n = 13 armchair GNRs that is associated with hydrogen-terminated sp2-hybridized carbon atoms at the zigzag termini.Keywords: bottom-up synthesis; energy gaps; graphene nanoribbon; molecular precursors; scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy
Co-reporter:Dimas G. de Oteyza;Patrick Gorman;Yen-Chia Chen;Sebastian Wickenburg;Alexander Riss;Duncan J. Mowbray;Zahra Pedramrazi;Grisha Etkin;Hsin-Zon Tsai;Angel Rubio;Michael F. Crommie
Science 2013 Volume 340(Issue 6139) pp:1434-1437
Publication Date(Web):21 Jun 2013
DOI:10.1126/science.1238187

Watching Organic Reactions

Single-molecule studies can overcome the difficulty of inferring the various outcomes of reactions in ensemble measurements. De Oteyza et al. (p. 1434, published online 30 May; see the Perspective by Giessibl) used a variation of noncontact atomic force microscopy in which the imaging tip was derivatized with a single CO molecule to obtain subnanometer-resolution images of conjugated organic molecules undergoing reaction on a silver surface. Different thermally induced cyclization reactions of oligo- (phenylene-1,2-ethynylenes) were observed.

Co-reporter:Danielle F. Sedbrook, Daniel W. Paley, Michael L. Steigerwald, Colin Nuckolls, and Felix R. Fischer
Macromolecules 2012 Volume 45(Issue 12) pp:5040-5044
Publication Date(Web):June 13, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ma300876q
We describe here a well-behaved initiator for ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization (ROAMP) of dibenzocyclooctynes. The reaction produces living polymers with low polydispersities and predictable molecular weights. We activate the well-known alkyne metathesis precatalyst, [(N(tBu)Ar)3Mo≡CCH2CH3], with phenolic ligands that have σ-electron donating substituents. We show that the chelating ability of these ligands as well as the nature of the propagating molybdenum center have dramatic effects on the outcome of the polymerization reaction.
Boronic acid, [2-(2-thienyl)phenyl]-
Copper cyanide(Cu(13CN)) (9CI)
Benzene,1-bromo-2-[(phenylsulfonyl)methyl]-
5,6,11,12-tetradehydrodibenzo[a,e][8]annulene
Benzene, 1,1'-(1,2-ethynediyl)bis[2-methyl-
6(13H)-PENTACENETHIONE
Benzene, 1,2-bis[(2-ethynylphenyl)ethynyl]-
1,4-Bis[(trimethylsilyl)ethynyl]benzene
Ethanol, 2-[2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy]-, 1-(4-methylbenzenesulfonate)