Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.130, No.11, 3664-3668, 2008
Dynamic strength of the silicon-carbon bond observed over three decades of force-loading rates
The mechanical strength of individual Si-C bonds was determined as a function of the applied force-loading rate by dynamic single-molecule force spectroscopy, using an atomic force microscope. The applied force-loading rates ranged from 0.5 to 267 nN/s, spanning 3 orders of magnitude. As predicted by Arrhenius kinetics models, a logarithmic increase of the bond rupture force with increasing force-loading rate was observed, with average rupture forces ranging from 1.1 nN for 0.5 nN/s to 1.8 nN for 267 nN/s. Three different theoretical models, all based on Arrhenius kinetics and analytic forms of the binding potential, were used to analyze the experimental data and to extract the parameters f(max) and D-e of the binding potential, together with the Arrhenius A-factor. All three models well reproduced the experimental data, including statistical scattering; nevertheless, the three free parameters allow so much flexibility that they cannot be extracted unambiguously from the experimental data. Successful fits with a Morse potential were achieved with f(max) = 2.0-4.8 nN and D-e = 76-87 kJ/mol, with the Arrhenius A-factor covering 2.45 x 10(-10)-3 x 10(-5) s(-1), respectively. The Morse potential parameters and A-factor taken from gas-phase density functional calculations, on the other hand, did not reproduce the experimental forces and force-loading rate dependence.