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- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
- Novel Catalytic Materials I
- (44d) Enantiospecific Desorption of Propylene Oxide From Chirally Modified Surfaces
S- or R-propylene oxide was adsorbed, as the chiral probe, onto the L-alanine templated Cu(110) and L-lysine restructured Cu(100) surfaces to detect possible enantiospecific desorption. No enantiospecificity was detected on the L-alanine templated surface at either low or high alanine coverages. On the L-lysine/Cu(100) surface, the system was found to exhibit enantiospecific behavior over a narrow range of lysine coverages in which S-propylene oxide desorbed at a higher temperature than R-propylene oxide from the same L-lysine modified Cu(100) surface. In other words, S-propylene oxide adsorbs more strongly on the L-lysine/Cu(100) surface than R-propylene oxide. This observed enantiospecificity, however, was found to be critically dependent on the lysine modifier coverage. The enantiospecific temperature difference between S- and R-propylene oxide from the L-lysine/Cu(100) surface becomes larger with increasing L-lysine coverage before reaching a maximum of ~ 5.5 K. The enantiospecificity then decreases with increasing lysine coverage until no more available sites on the surface can be occupied by incoming propylene oxide.