A redox reaction triggered by squeezing a crystal results in the ejection of copper nanoparticles
Squeezing a cleverly designed crystal can trigger the creation of nanoparticles in the first example of a pressure-driven mechanochemical synthesis.1Computer models of the crystal’s structural change under pressure provide atomic-level insight into how force transforms into chemical reactivity, a process that is still a mystery for many mechanochemical reactions despite them being known about for centuries.
The first recorded instance of a mechanochemical reaction came from the ancient Greek philosopher Theophrastus, who described crushing mercury sulfide and vinegar in a copper morter and pestle to produce elemental mercury. In the 19th century, Michael Faraday and M Carey Lea investigated mechanochemical reactions more carefully. Lea noticed that reagents ground together often produced products that were different from the same reaction if it was initiated using heat.
Mechanochemistry was widely applied in the 1960s to make metal alloys from insoluble components. But over the past 15 years, researchers have expanded the mechanochemical toolkit to include reactions typically performed in solution. ‘The eye-opener is that mechanochemistry is really general for many inorganic and organic reactions,’ says Stuart James at Queen’s University Belfast, who was not involved with the squeezed crystal research.
Researchers have ground ingredients together to produce metal catalysts,2 make carbon–carbon bonds and perform asymmetric organic reactions3, among other reactions. The field’s rebirth is driven largely by an interest in sustainable synthesis. As mechanochemical reactions use little to no solvent, they produce less waste than solution-based chemistry.
Along with expanding the library of mechanochemical reactions, researchers have also experimented with ways to deliver force. Industrial scale mills standardise grinding conditions, and ultrasound waves scrape solid surfaces. Stretching polymers can also snap customised bonds in the chains.
Under pressure
Instead of triggering a mechanochemical reaction by stretching a material, Nicholas Melosh, at Stanford University, and his colleagues wanted to use pressure. To do this, they created a material that directed a compressive force to particular atoms, rather than squishing all atoms in the crystal equally.
The researchers attached rigid polyhedral carborane ligands to a deformable inorganic core containing copper and sulfur and squeezed the crystal in a diamond anvil cell at pressures up to 12GPa. When they examined the pressurised material using transmission electron microscopy, they saw it contained 10nm coppernanoclusters. Heating the crystal to 400°C under vacuum to trigger a thermochemical reaction produced cuprous sulfide instead.
To better understand how pressure changed the composition of the inorganic core, the researchers modelled the material’s structure under varying amounts of force. As the pressure increased from 2 to 12GPa, the carboranes moved closer together and copper-sulfur bonds lengthened, enabling an electron transfer from sulfur to copper to produce metallic nanoparticles.
Modelling also showed why a material with larger adamantyl ligands, instead of carboranes, did not produce nanoparticles, even under a simulated 20GPa of pressure. The large adamantyl ligands have less room to move in the crystal before crashing into each other, so the copper–sulfur bonds do not elongate.
Thinking about using this material for synthesis, Melosh notes that there are easier ways to make nanoparticles. But he wonders if the idea of a ‘molecular anvil’ – trapping a soft reaction centre between two hard ligands – could be applied to difficult reactions like carbon dioxide reduction. However, one challenge of mechanochemistry is that the general principles of reactivity are not well understood. ‘To do a new reaction, we’d have to figure out how to build a material that holds a molecule in the right configuration to get enough compression,’ he says.
Researchers are starting to investigate the atomic and molecular-level mechanisms driving mechanochemical reactions, James says. He says that the modelling in this work is a nice way to get atomic insights into the mechanism of this reaction.
What is Mechanochemistry ???
Mechanochemistry or mechanical chemistry is the coupling of mechanical and chemical phenomena on a molecular scale and includes mechanical breakage, chemical behaviour of mechanically stressed solids (e.g., stress-corrosion cracking or enhanced oxidation, tribology, polymer degradation under shear, cavitation-related phenomena (e.g., sonochemistry and sonoluminescence), shock wave chemistry and physics, and even the burgeoning field of molecular machines. Mechanochemistry can be seen as an interface between chemistry and mechanical engineering. It is possible to synthesize chemical products by using only mechanical action. The mechanisms of mechanochemical transformations are often complex and different from usual thermal or photochemical mechanisms. The method of ball milling is a widely used process in which mechanical force is used to achieve chemical processing and transformations The special issue of Chemical Society Review (vol. 42, 2013, Issue 18) is dedicated to the theme of mechanochemistry. Fundamentals and applications ranging from nano materials to technology have been reviewed.
Mechanochemistry is radically different from the traditional way of dissolving, heating and stirring chemicals in a solution. Because it eliminates the need for many solvents, mechanochemistry could help make many chemical processes used by industry more environmentally friendly.[6] For example, the mechanochemical process has been used as an environmentally preferable way to synthesize pharmaceutically-attractive phenol hydrazones.[7]
The term mechanochemistry is sometimes confused with mechanosynthesis, which refers specifically to the machine-controlled construction of complex molecular products.[8][9]
Mechanochemical phenomena have been utilized since time immemorial, for example in making fire. The oldest method of making fire is to rub pieces of wood against each other, creating friction and hence heat, allowing the wood to undergo combustion at a high temperature. Another method involves the use of flint and steel, during which a spark (a small particle of pyrophoric metal) spontaneously combusts in air, starting fire instantaneously.