Issue 44, 2021

Hydrogen bonded trimesic acid networks on Cu(111) reveal how basic chemical properties are imprinted in HR-AFM images

Abstract

High resolution non-contact atomic force microscopy measurements characterize assemblies of trimesic acid molecules on Cu(111) and the link group interactions, providing the first fingerprints utilizing CO-based probes for this widely studied paradigm for hydrogen bond driven molecular self assembly. The enhanced submolecular resolution offered by this technique uniquely reveals key aspects of the competing interactions. Accurate comparison between full-density-based modeled images and experiment allows to identify key structural elements in the assembly in terms of the electron-withdrawing character of the carboxylic groups, interactions of those groups with Cu atoms in the surface, and the valence electron density in the intermolecular region of the hydrogen bonds. This study of trimesic acid assemblies on Cu(111) combining high resolution atomic force microscopy measurements with theory and simulation forges clear connections between fundamental chemical properties of molecules and key features imprinted in force images with submolecular resolution.

Graphical abstract: Hydrogen bonded trimesic acid networks on Cu(111) reveal how basic chemical properties are imprinted in HR-AFM images

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Jul 2021
Accepted
07 Sep 2021
First published
14 Sep 2021

Nanoscale, 2021,13, 18473-18482

Author version available

Hydrogen bonded trimesic acid networks on Cu(111) reveal how basic chemical properties are imprinted in HR-AFM images

P. Zahl, A. V. Yakutovich, E. Ventura-Macías, J. Carracedo-Cosme, C. Romero-Muñiz, P. Pou, J. T. Sadowski, M. S. Hybertsen and R. Pérez, Nanoscale, 2021, 13, 18473 DOI: 10.1039/D1NR04471K

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