Issue 39, 2023

A local point of view of the Cu(100) → NiTPP charge transfer at the NiTPP/Cu(100) interface

Abstract

A precise understanding, at the molecular level, of the massive substrate → adsorbate charge transfer at the NiTPP/Cu(100) interface has been gained through the application of elementary symmetry arguments to the structural determination of the NiTPP adsorption site by photoelectron diffraction (PED) measurements and Amsterdam density functional calculations of the free D4h NiTPP electronic structure. In particular, the PED analysis precisely determines that, among the diverse NiTPP chemisorption sites herein considered (fourfold hollow, atop, and bridge), the fourfold hollow one is the most favorable, with the Ni atom located at 1.93 Å from the surface and at an internuclear distance of 2.66 Å from the nearest-neighbors of the substrate. The use of elementary symmetry considerations enabled us to provide a convincing modeling of the NiTPP–Cu(100) anchoring configuration and an atomistic view of the previously revealed interfacial charge transfer through the unambiguous identification of the adsorbate π* and σ* low-lying virtual orbitals, of the substrate surface atoms, and of the linear combinations of the Cu 4s atomic orbitals involved in the substrate → adsorbate charge transfer. In addition, the same considerations revealed that the experimentally reported Ni(II) → Ni(I) reduction at the interface corresponds to the fingerprint of the chemisorption site of the NiTPP on Cu(100).

Graphical abstract: A local point of view of the Cu(100) → NiTPP charge transfer at the NiTPP/Cu(100) interface

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Aug 2023
Accepted
13 Sep 2023
First published
13 Sep 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 26779-26786

A local point of view of the Cu(100) → NiTPP charge transfer at the NiTPP/Cu(100) interface

S. Carlotto, A. Verdini, G. Zamborlini, I. Cojocariu, V. Feyer, L. Floreano and M. Casarin, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 26779 DOI: 10.1039/D3CP04021F

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