17 research outputs found
Two-dimensional ketone-driven metal-organic coordination on Cu(111)
Two-dimensional metal-organic nanostructures based on the binding of ketone groups and metal atoms were fabricated by depositing pyrene-4,5,9,10-tetraone (PTO) molecules on a Cu(111) surface. The strongly electronegative ketone moieties bind to either copper adatoms from the substrate or co-deposited iron atoms. In the former case, scanning tunnelling microscopy images reveal the development of an extended metal-organic supramolecular structure. Each copper adatom coordinates two ketone ligands of two neighbouring PTO molecules, forming chains that are linked together into large islands via secondary van der Waals interactions. Deposition of iron atoms leads to a transformation of this assembly resulting from the substitution of the metal centres. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the driving force for the metal substitution is primarily determined by the strength of the ketone-metal bond, which is higher for Fe compared to Cu. This second class of nanostructures displays a structural dependence on the rate of iron deposition
Anomalous coarsening driven by reversible charge transfer at metal–organic interfaces
The unique electronic properties and functional tunability of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons have recently fostered high hopes for their use in flexible, green, portable, and cheap technologies. Most applications require the deposition of thin molecular films onto conductive electrodes. The growth of the first few molecular layers represents a crucial step in the device fabrication since it determines the structure of the molecular film and the energy level alignment of the metal–organic interface. Here, we explore the formation of this interface by analyzing the interplay between reversible molecule–substrate charge transfer, yielding intermolecular repulsion, and van der Waals attractions in driving the molecular assembly. Using a series of ad hoc designed molecules to balance the two effects, we combine scanning tunnelling microscopy with atomistic simulations to study the self-assembly behavior. Our systematic analysis identifies a growth mode characterized by anomalous coarsening that we anticipate to occur in a wide class of metal–organic interfaces and which should thus be considered as integral part of the self-assembly process when depositing a molecule on a conducting surface
A long-range ordered array of copper tetrameric units embedded in an on-surface metal organic framework
We report on the assembly of a highly ordered array of copper tetrameric clusters, coordinated into a metal-organic network. The ordered cluster array has been achieved by the deposition of tetrahydroxyquinone molecules on the Cu(111) surface at room temperature, and subsequent thermally activated dehydrogenation with the formation of tetraoxyquinone tetra-anions with a 4 x 4 periodicity. The supramolecular organic network acts as a spacer for the highly ordered two-dimensional network of copper tetramers at the very surface
Self-assembly of decoupled borazines on metal surfaces : the role of the peripheral groups
Two borazine derivatives have been synthesised to investigate their self-assembly behaviour on Au(111) and Cu(111) surfaces by scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and theoretical simulations. Both borazines form extended 2D networks upon adsorption on both substrates at room temperature. Whereas the more compact triphenyl borazine 1 arranges into close-packed ordered molecular islands with an extremely low density of defects on both substrates, the tris(phenyl-4-phenylethynyl) derivative 2 assembles into porous molecular networks due to its longer lateral substituents. For both species, the steric hindrance between the phenyl and mesityl substituents results in an effective decoupling of the central borazine core from the surface. For borazine 1, this is enough to weaken the molecule–substrate interaction, so that the assemblies are only driven by attractive van der Waals intermolecular forces. For the longer and more flexible borazine 2, a stronger molecule–substrate interaction becomes possible through its peripheral substituents on the more reactive copper surface
Pressure-Induced Conformation Transition of <i>o</i>‑Phenylene Solvated in Bulk Hydrocarbons
The
conformational behavior of <i>o</i>-phenylene 8-mers
and 10-mers solvated in a series of linear alkane solvents by means
of classical molecular dynamics and first-principles calculations
was studied. Irrespective of the solvent used, we find that at ambient
pressure the molecule sits in the well-defined close-helical arrangement
previously observed in light polar solvents. However, for pressures
greater than 50 atm, and for tetradecane or larger solvent molecules,
our simulations predict that <i>o</i>-phenylene undergoes
a conformational transition to an uncoiled, extended geometry with
a 35% longer head-to-tail distance and a much larger overlap between
its lateral aromatic ring groups. The free energy barrier for the
transition was studied as a function of pressure and temperature for
both solute molecules in butane and hexadecane. Gas-phase density
functional theory-based nudged elastic band calculations on 8-mer
and 10-mer <i>o</i>-phenylene were used to estimate how
the pressure-induced transition energy barrier changes with solute
length. Our results indicate that a sufficiently large solvent molecule
size is the key factor enabling a configuration transition upon pressure
changes and that longer solute molecules associate with higher conformation
transition energy barriers. This suggests the possibility of designing
systems in which a solute molecule can be selectively “activated”
by a controlled conformation transition achieved at a predefined set
of pressure and temperature conditions
Data for Two-dimensional ketone-driven metal–organic coordination on Cu(111)
Two-dimensional metal-organic nanostructures based on the binding of ketone groups and metal atoms were fabricated by depositing pyrene-4,5,9,10-tetraone (PTO) molecules on a Cu(111) surface. The strongly electronegative ketone moieties bind to either copper adatoms from the substrate or co-deposited iron atoms. In the former case, scanning tunnelling microscopy images reveal the development of an extended metal-organic supramolecular structure. Each copper adatom coordinates two ketone ligands of two neighbouring PTO molecules, forming chains that are linked together into large islands via secondary van der Waals interactions. Deposition of iron atoms leads to a transformation of this assembly resulting from the substitution of the metal centres. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the driving force for the metal substitution is primarily determined by the strength of the ketone-metal bond, which is higher for Fe compared to Cu. This second class of nanostructures displays a structural dependence on the rate of iron deposition