Enantioselective Adsorption on Magnetic Surfaces

Author:

Safari Mohammad Reza12ORCID,Matthes Frank12ORCID,Caciuc Vasile3ORCID,Atodiresei Nicolae3ORCID,Schneider Claus M.124ORCID,Ernst Karl‐Heinz567ORCID,Bürgler Daniel E.12

Affiliation:

1. Peter Grünberg Institute, Electronic Properties (PGI‐6) Forschungszentrum Jülich 52425 Jülich Germany

2. Jülich Aachen Research Alliance (JARA‐FIT), Fundamentals of Future Information Technology Forschungszentrum Jülich 52425 Jülich Germany

3. Peter Grünberg Institute and Institute for Advanced Simulation, Quantum Theory of Materials (PGI‐1/IAS‐1) Forschungszentrum Jülich 52425 Jülich Germany

4. Fakultät für Physik Universität Duisburg‐Essen 47057 Duisburg Germany

5. Molecular Surface Science Group, Empa Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology 8600 Dübendorf Switzerland

6. Nanosurf Laboratory, Institute of Physics The Czech Academy of Sciences 16200 Prague Czech Republic

7. Institut für Chemie Universität Zürich 8057 Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractFrom the beginning of molecular theory, the interplay of chirality and magnetism has intrigued scientists. There is still the question if enantiospecific adsorption of chiral molecules occurs on magnetic surfaces. Enantiomer discrimination was conjectured to arise from chirality‐induced spin separation within the molecules and exchange interaction with the substrate's magnetization. Here, it is shown that single helical aromatic hydrocarbons undergo enantioselective adsorption on ferromagnetic cobalt surfaces. Spin and chirality sensitive scanning tunneling microscopy reveals that molecules of opposite handedness prefer adsorption onto cobalt islands with opposite out‐of‐plane magnetization. As mobility ceases in the final chemisorbed state, it is concluded that enantioselection must occur in a physisorbed transient precursor state. State‐of‐the‐art spin‐resolved ab initio simulations support this scenario by refuting enantio‐dependent chemisorption energies. These findings demonstrate that van der Waals interaction should also include spin‐fluctuations which are crucial for molecular magnetochiral processes.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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