Issue 44, 2022

Defect-engineered surfaces to investigate the formation of self-assembled molecular networks

Abstract

Herein we report the impact of covalent modification (grafting), inducing lateral nanoconfinement conditions, on the self-assembly of a quinonoid zwitterion derivative into self-assembled molecular networks at the liquid/solid interface. At low concentrations where the compound does not show self-assembly behaviour on bare highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), close-packed self-assembled structures are visualized by scanning tunneling microscopy on covalently modified HOPG. The size of the self-assembled domains decreases with increasing the density of grafted molecules, i.e. the molecules covalently bound to the surface. The dynamics of domains are captured with molecular resolution, revealing not only time-dependent growth and shrinkage processes but also the orientation conversion of assembled domains. Grafted pins play a key role in initiating the formation of on-surface molecular self-assembly and their stabilization, providing an elegant route to study various aspects of nucleation and growth processes of self-assembled molecular networks.

Graphical abstract: Defect-engineered surfaces to investigate the formation of self-assembled molecular networks

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
17 Aug 2022
Accepted
24 Oct 2022
First published
27 Oct 2022
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2022,13, 13212-13219

Defect-engineered surfaces to investigate the formation of self-assembled molecular networks

L. Yu, Z. Cai, L. Verstraete, Y. Xia, Y. Fang, L. Cuccia, O. Ivasenko and S. De Feyter, Chem. Sci., 2022, 13, 13212 DOI: 10.1039/D2SC04599K

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