1 research outputs found
Electrostatic Properties of Adsorbed Polar Molecules: Opposite Behavior of a Single Molecule and a Molecular Monolayer
We compare the electrostatic behavior of a single polar molecule adsorbed on a solid substrate
with that of an adsorbed polar monolayer. This is accomplished by comparing first principles calculations
obtained within a cluster model and a periodic slab model, using benzene derivatives on the Si(111) surface
as a representative test case. We find that the two models offer diametrically opposite descriptions of the
surface electrostatic phenomena. Slab electrostatics is dominated by dipole reduction due to intermolecular
dipole−dipole interactions that partially depolarize the molecules, with charge migration to the substrate
playing a negligible role due to electric field suppression outside the monolayer. Conversely, cluster
electrostatics is dominated by dipole enhancement due to charge migration to/from the substrate, with
only a small polarization of the molecule. This establishes the important role played by long-range
interactions, in addition to local chemical properties, in tailoring surface chemistry via polar molecule
adsorption
