1 research outputs found
Growth Mode Transition from Monolayer by Monolayer to Bilayer by Bilayer in Molecularly Flat Titanyl Phthalocyanine Film
To
avoid defects associated with inhomogeneous crystallites and
uneven morphology that degrade organic device performance, the deposition
of ultraflat and homogeneous crystalline organic active layers is
required. The growth mode transition of organic semiconducting titanyl
phthalocyanine (TiOPc) molecule from monolayer-by-monolayer to bilayer-by-bilayer
can be observed on highly ordered pyrolytic graphic (HOPG), while
maintaining large and molecularly flat domains. The first monolayer
of TiOPc lies flat on HOPG with a ∼98% face-up orientation.
However, as the thickness of the TiOPc increases to over 15 monolayers
(ML), the growth mode transitions to bilayer-by-bilayer with the repeated
stacking of bilayers (BL), each of which has face-to-face pairs. Density
functional theory calculations reveal that the increasing of thickness
induces weakening of the substrate effect on the deposited TiOPc layers,
resulting in the growth mode transition to BL-by-BL. The asymmetric
stacking provides the driving force to maintain nearly constant surface
order during growth, allowing precise, subnanometer thickness control
and large domain growth