Molecular chirality stands as one of the most intriguing phenomena in both living systems and asymmetric chemistry, yet its foundational origins have long evaded clear understanding. The core challenge lies in tracing the very first symmetry-breaking events at the single-molecule level, which traditionally remain obscured in ensemble measurements dominated by averaged signals. Understanding how random, stochastic single-molecule behaviors culminate in pronounced enantiomeric excess at the population scale has remained a central, unresolved question in the field.
A groundbreaking investigation conducted by researchers at Peking University, in collaboration with international partners, has now shattered this barrier by introducing a novel single-molecule platform that enables real-time monitoring of asymmetric evolution from the very onset of a Diels–Alder reaction. By harnessing the power of graphene–molecule–graphene single-molecule junctions in concert with the chirality-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect, the team directly detected spontaneous mirror-symmetry breaking in unprecedented detail. This innovative approach revealed the intricate molecular origin of reaction chirality and demonstrated how catalyst-free, on-line asymmetric synthesis can be achieved and finely controlled using electrical stimuli.
At the heart of this study is a carefully engineered graphene-based single-molecule junction designed to trace the entire reaction trajectory with immaculate precision. This includes fleeting intermediate states, pre-reaction charge-transfer complexes, and the eventual product states. The employment of ferromagnetic electrodes allowed the CISS effect to act as a molecular chiral sensor, differentiating product enantiomers dynamically as the reaction progressed. Event-resolved electrical trajectories exhibited a non-monotonic evolution of enantiomeric excess, passing through three distinct phases: an initial symmetry-breaking event, oscillatory compensation between opposite enantiomers, and a final stabilization at elevated enantiomeric excess.
Delving deeper into the mechanistic intricacies, the study uncovered that the stereochemical outcome is not dictated by the cycloaddition step as traditionally assumed. Rather, the critical determinant of reaction chirality precedes this event and is ingrained in the initial spatial configuration of the acrylic acid substrate as it forms a pre-reaction complex. This configuration is profoundly influenced by its coupling to an external electric field, a novel insight that emphasizes how subtle electric environmental interactions govern chiral fate from the very earliest molecular moments.
Building on these insights, the researchers proposed a compelling excess-compensation mechanism for chiral amplification. Within this framework, a minuscule, spontaneous initial enantiomeric excess triggers the compensatory generation of the opposite enantiomer, leading to oscillations in the overall enantiomeric excess before converging to a stable, enantiomerically enriched state. This dynamic behavior were further confirmed by temperature-dependent kinetic measurements, rigorous autocorrelation analyses, and advanced theoretical modeling, collectively providing a robust validation for the proposed model.
Equally transformative is the advent of an electrical control strategy for asymmetric synthesis offered by this research. By exploiting the electrical detectability and second-scale lifetimes of pre-reaction charge-transfer complexes, the team demonstrated the ability to selectively activate specific reaction pathways. Application of a 1 V electrical pulse precisely timed to coincide with target charge-transfer states, followed by removal at the cationic state, allowed real-time steering of the reaction outcome down desired stereochemical and regioselective routes.
The practical implications of this capability are profound. Using this approach, near-perfect stereoselectivity was achieved, with enantiomeric excess approaching 100% and diastereomeric excess exceeding 88%, all without the use of traditional chiral catalysts. Such precise control via purely electrical means highlights a paradigm shift in asymmetric synthesis, potentially enabling scalable, catalyst-free production of chiral molecules under mild, tunable conditions.
Beyond methodological advances, the study offers a comprehensive molecular-level framework explaining how chirality emerges spontaneously from symmetry-breaking events guided by electric fields and molecular configurations. This fundamental understanding opens avenues to design novel chiral materials and reactions with tailored properties by manipulating electric environments at the molecular scale.
The insight that pre-reaction complex structure and electric coupling dictate chiral outcome challenges longstanding mechanistic assumptions in stereochemistry and asymmetric catalysis. It further suggests that electric fields, often overlooked in reaction design, could serve as universal levers to drive and control selectivity in otherwise racemic processes.
Technically, the integration of graphene single-molecule junctions with spin-selective ferromagnetic electrodes represents a tour de force in nanomaterials engineering, merging high electrical sensitivity with quantum spin phenomena. This hybrid platform transcends traditional chemical sensing by providing spin-resolved signatures of chirality, enabling researchers to dissect elusive molecular dynamics in real time with single-event resolution.
The research harnesses advanced computational methods and kinetic analyses to dissect reaction trajectories into quantifiable stages, correlating conformational flexibility, charge transport properties, and spin polarization effects within a unified framework. Such multidimensional characterization is pivotal for translating fundamental discoveries into actionable synthetic strategies.
In summary, this pioneering work not only elucidates the elusive origin of single-molecule reaction chirality but also establishes a new frontier for electrically regulated, catalyst-free asymmetric synthesis. By capturing the earliest symmetry-breaking processes and steering them with high precision, the study lays the groundwork for next-generation chiral chemistry, with broad implications spanning pharmaceuticals, materials science, and molecular electronics.
As the chemical sciences push toward ever finer control over molecular reactivity and function, innovations like these—at the intersection of nanotechnology, spintronics, and chemistry—are set to redefine how chirality is understood, manipulated, and exploited for transformative applications.
Subject of Research:
Molecular Chirality and On-line Asymmetric Synthesis via Single-Molecule Electrical Control
Article Title:
Origin of Single-Molecule Reaction Chirality
News Publication Date:
24-Feb-2026
Web References:
10.34133/research.1150
Keywords
Molecular Chirality, Single-Molecule Junction, Graphene, Chirality-Induced Spin Selectivity, Diels–Alder Reaction, Asymmetric Synthesis, Electrical Control, Enantiomeric Excess, Reaction Mechanism, Spintronics, Catalyst-Free Synthesis, Real-Time Monitoring
