Issue 13, 2021

Selective saturation of step-edges as a tool to control the growth of molecular fibres

Abstract

The concept of bottom-up self-organisation has become a promising alternative for structuring molecular materials, which are hardly accessible by conventional top-down approaches such as lithography due to their limited chemical robustness. While these materials often tend to form three-dimensional, crystalline islands or fibres upon film growth, the size and orientation of such fibres are mainly governed by appropriate preparation conditions as well as microscopic interactions at the interface with the supporting surface. Substrate surface defects such as vacancies or step-edges, which cannot be completely ruled out on real surfaces on the mesoscopic scale, can act as preferred nucleation sites for molecules that leads to parasitic film growth competing with their intrinsic alignment prevailing on an ideal surface. In the present study, we demonstrate for the case of para-quaterphenyl (p-4P) that the presence of azimuthally disordered, fibres on Ag(111) surfaces can be understood as a superposition of step-mediated nucleation and the intrinsic epitaxial fibre growth on ideal surfaces. We validate the concept by purposely exposing the silver substrates briefly to oxygen or even ambient air to passivate the more reactive step-sites, which hampers subsequently grown molecular films to nucleate at these step-edges. This yields a truly epitaxial alignment as well as an enlargement of the fibres present on the whole sample.

Graphical abstract: Selective saturation of step-edges as a tool to control the growth of molecular fibres

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 dez 2020
Accepted
18 jan 2021
First published
18 jan 2021

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021,23, 8023-8029

Selective saturation of step-edges as a tool to control the growth of molecular fibres

M. Dreher and G. Witte, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021, 23, 8023 DOI: 10.1039/D0CP06725C

To request permission to reproduce material from this article, please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

If you are an author contributing to an RSC publication, you do not need to request permission provided correct acknowledgement is given.

If you are the author of this article, you do not need to request permission to reproduce figures and diagrams provided correct acknowledgement is given. If you want to reproduce the whole article in a third-party publication (excluding your thesis/dissertation for which permission is not required) please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

Read more about how to correctly acknowledge RSC content.

Social activity

Spotlight

Advertisements