Publication | Closed Access
C<scp>ONTROLLED</scp> M<scp>OLECULAR</scp> A<scp>DSORPTION ON</scp> S<scp>ILICON</scp>: Laying a Foundation for Molecular Devices
630
Citations
88
References
1999
Year
EngineeringMolecular BiologyMolecule-silicon Surface SystemsAnalytical UltracentrifugationChemistryAdsorption DynamicsMolecular DesignChemical EngineeringMolecular DevicesMaterials ScienceMolecular SciencesNanotechnologyAdsorptionMolecular EngineeringOrganic Molecular AdsorptionBiomolecular EngineeringHost-guest ChemistrySurface FunctionalizationSurface ChemistryNatural SciencesSelf-assemblySurface Science
This review is about understanding and controlling organic molecular adsorption on silicon. The goal is to provide a microscopic picture of structure and bonding in covalently attached molecule-silicon surface systems. The bias here is that an unprecedented, detailed understanding of adsorbate-surface structures is required in order to gain the control necessary to incorporate organic function into existing technologies or, eventually, to make new molecule-scale devices. A discussion of recent studies of adsorbate structure is presented. This includes simple alkenes, polyenes, benzene, and carene adsorbed on Si(100). Also included is a discussion of wet chemical procedures for forming alkyl and alkoxy covalently functionalized silicon. These discussions are presented together with comments on the related issues of adsorption dynamics and nano-scale manipulation in an effort to point the way toward principles and procedures that will allow the hybrid properties of organic molecules and surfaces to be harnessed.
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