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    Competing Intermolecular and Molecule鈥揝urface Interactions: Dipole鈥揇ipole-Driven Patterns in Mixed Carborane Self-Assembled Monolayers

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    Carboranedithiol isomers adsorbing with opposite orientations of their dipoles on surfaces are self-assembled together to form mixed monolayers where both lateral dipole鈥揹ipole and lateral thiol鈥搕hiolate (S鈥揌路路路S) interactions provide enhanced stability over single-component monolayers. We demonstrate the first instance of the ability to map individual isomers in a mixed monolayer using the model system carboranedithiols on Au{111}. The addition of methyl groups to one isomer provides both an enhanced dipole moment and extra apparent height for differentiation via scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Associated computational investigations rationalize favorable interactions of mixed pairs and the associated stability changes that arise from these interactions. Both STM images and Monte Carlo simulations yield similarly structured mixed monolayers, where approximately 10% of the molecules have reversed dipole moment orientations but no direct chemical attachment to the surface, leading to homogeneous monolayers with no apparent phase separation. Deprotonating the thiols by depositing the molecules under basic conditions eliminates the lateral S鈥揌路路路S interactions while accentuating the dipole鈥揹ipole forces. The molecular system investigated is composed of isomeric molecules with opposite orientations of dipoles and identical surface packing, which enables the mapping of individual molecules within the mixed monolayers and enables analyses of the contributions of the relatively weak lateral interactions to the overall stability of the assemblies
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