Large π-conjugated molecules, when in contact with a metal surface, usually retain a finite electronic gap and, in this sense, stay semiconducting. In some cases, however, the metallic character of the underlying substrate is seen to extend onto the first molecular layer. Here, we develop a chemical rationale for this intriguing phenomenon. In many reported instances, we find that the conjugation length of the organic semiconductors increases significantly through the bonding of specific substituents to the metal surface and through the concomitant rehybridization of the entire backbone structure. The molecules at the interface are thus converted into different chemical species with a strongly reduced electronic gap. This mechanism of surface-induced aromatic stabilization helps molecules to overcome competing phenomena that tend to keep the metal Fermi level between their frontier orbitals. Our findings aid in the design of stable precursors for metallic molecular monolayers, and thus enable new routes for the chemical engineering of metal surfaces.
We present a benchmark study for the adsorption of a large π -conjugated organic molecule on different noble metal surfaces, which is based on x-ray standing wave (XSW) measurements and density functional theory calculations with van der Waals (vdW) interactions. The bonding distances of diindenoperylene on Cu(111), Ag(111), and Au (111) surfaces (2.51, 3.01, and 3.10Å, respectively) determined with the normal-incidence XSW technique are compared with calculations. Excellent agreement with the experimental data, i.e., deviations less than 0.1Å, is achieved using the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) functional with vdW interactions that include the collective response of substrate electrons (the PBE + vdW surf method). It is noteworthy that the calculations show that the vdW contribution to the adsorption energy increases in the order Au(111) < Ag(111) < Cu(111).
Organic heterostructures are a central part of a manifold of (opto)electronic devices and serve a variety of functions. Particularly, molecular monolayers on metal electrodes are of paramount importance for device performance as they allow tuning energy levels in a versatile way. However, this can be hampered by molecular exchange, i.e., by interlayer diffusion of molecules toward the metal surface. We show that the organic−metal interaction strength is the decisive factor for the arrangement in bilayers, which is the most fundamental version of organic−organic heterostructures. The subtle differences in molecular structure of 6,13-pentacenequinone (P2O) and 5,7,12,14-pentacenetetrone (P4O) lead to antithetic adsorption behavior on Ag(111): physisorption of P2O but chemisorption of P4O. This allows providing general indicators for organic−metal coupling based on shifts in photoelectron spectroscopy data and to show that the coupling strength of copper-phthalocyanine (CuPc) with Ag(111) is in between that of P2O and P4O. We find that, indeed, CuPc forms a bilayer when deposited on a monolayer P4O/Ag(111) but molecular exchange takes place with P2O, as shown by a combination of scanning tunneling microscopy and X-ray standing wave experiments.
We report coverage and temperature dependent bonding distances of vacuum-sublimed pentacene (PEN) submonolayers on Ag(111) obtained by the X-ray standing wave technique. The average vertical bonding distance of 2.98 Å at room temperature for 0.50 monolayer (ML) coverage increases to 3.12 Å for 0.75 ML due to competing intermolecular and adsorbate-substrate interactions. In contrast, decreasing the temperature from 295 to 145 K does not impact the bonding distance despite the concomitant transition from a "liquidlike" to an ordered molecular arrangement. In combination with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results, we could identify "soft chemisorption" with a subtle balance of molecule-molecule and substrate-molecule interactions as being responsible for this special adsorption behavior. Thus our study sheds light not only on the interface between PEN and Ag(111), but also on fundamental adsorption processes of organic adsorbates on metals in the context of chemi- and physisorption.
The adsorption of molecular acceptors is a viable method for tuning the work function of metal electrodes. This, in turn, enables adjusting charge injection barriers between the electrode and organic semiconductors. Here, we demonstrate the potential of pyrene-tetraone (PyT) and its derivatives dibromopyrene-tetraone (Br-PyT) and dinitropyrene-tetraone (NO2-PyT) for modifying the electronic properties of Au(111) and Ag(111) surfaces. The systems are investigated by complementary theoretical and experimental approaches, including photoelectron spectroscopy, the X-ray standing wave technique, and density functional theory simulations. For some of the investigated interfaces the trends expected for Fermi-level pinning are observed, i.e., an increase of the metal work function along with increasing molecular electron affinity and the same work function for Au and Ag with monolayer acceptor coverage. Substantial deviations are, however, found for Br-PyT/Ag(111) and NO2-PyT/Ag(111), where in the latter case an adsorption-induced work function increase of as much as 1.6 eV is observed. This behavior is explained as arising from a face-on to edge-on reorientation of molecules in the monolayer. Our calculations show that for an edge-on orientation much larger work-function changes can be expected despite the prevalence of Fermi-level pinning. This is primarily ascribed to a change of the electron affinity of the adsorbate layer that results from a change of the molecular orientation. This work provides a comprehensive understanding of how changing the molecular electron affinity as well as the adsorbate structure impacts the electronic properties of electrodes.
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