Publication | Closed Access
Novel Mechanism for Molecular Self-Assembly on Metal Substrates: Unidirectional Rows of Pentacene on Cu(110) Produced by a Substrate-Mediated Repulsion
290
Citations
25
References
2001
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyEngineeringOrganic ElectronicsOscillatory ModulationMolecular Self-assemblyChemistryChemical EngineeringSubstrate-mediated RepulsionLong RangeMetal-organic PolyhedronMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyOrganic SemiconductorMolecular MaterialPhysical ChemistryMolecular EngineeringAdsorption EnergyOrganic Charge-transfer CompoundNovel MechanismSurface ChemistryNatural SciencesSelf-assemblySurface ScienceMolecule-based Material
The formation of one-dimensional, unidirectional nanoscopic molecular structures by self-assembly on metal substrates with a long range ordering up to several hundred nanometers has been achieved by a novel mechanism, an oscillatory modulation of the adsorption energy due to charge-density waves related to a surface state. For the case of pentacene (C22H14) adsorbed on Cu(110), annealing at 400 K produces a regular pattern of molecular wires one molecule wide (15.6 A) and a wire-to-wire distance of 28+/-2 A. Results obtained for similar compounds suggest that the underlying mechanism is rather general and can be applied also for other linear aromatic molecules.
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