Electronic Properties of Biphenylthiolates on Au(111):
The Impact of Coverage Revisited
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
We study the impact of coverage on
the electronic structure of
substituted biphenylthiolate-based self-assembled monolayers (SAMs)
on Au(111) surfaces with a particular focus on SAM-induced work-function
changes, ΔΦ. This is done using density functional theory
accounting also for van der Waals interactions. We find that the tilt
angle of the molecules increases significantly when reducing the coverage,
which results in a marked decrease of the perpendicular component
of the molecular dipole moment. However, ΔΦ does not follow
the trend that one would expect on purely geometrical grounds. While
for donor-substituted SAMs, ΔΦ decreases much more slowly
than anticipated, for acceptor-substituted SAMs the coverage-induced
reduction of ΔΦ is clearly more pronounced than expected.
In fact, in that case ΔΦ already vanishes around half
coverage. This is in part associated with the (coverage-dependent)
bond dipole originating from the “Au–S–C”
bond. Especially for low coverages, however, the relevance of the
“Au–S–C” dipole diminishes, and we observe
a significant contribution of Pauli-Pushback (also known as “cushion
effect”) to the interfacial charge rearrangements, an effect
that hitherto received only minor attention in the discussion of covalently
bonded SAMs