Currently, the direct synthesis of inch-scale single-crystal graphene on insulating substrates is limited by the lack of metal catalysis, suitable crystallization conditions, and self-limiting growth mechanisms. In this study, we investigated the direct growth of adlayer-free ultra-flat wafer-scale single-crystal monolayer graphene on insulating substrates by the multi-cycle plasma-etching-assisted chemical vapor deposition (MPE-CVD) method. Firstly, an angstrom-scale growth nanochamber was created by fabricating single-crystal Cu(111) foils on Al2O3(0001) substrates. Graphene was then directly synthesized at the interface between Cu(111) and Al2O3(0001) by MPE-CVD. After growth, the Cu(111) foil was detached using a liquid-nitrogen-assisted separation method, and the ultra-high-quality single-crystal graphene film was experimentally achieved on Al2O3(0001). This work breaks the bottleneck in the direct synthesis of single-crystal monolayer graphene on insulating substrates and paves the way for next-generation carbon-based atomic electronics and semiconductor nanodevices.
GIDVis is a software package based on MATLAB specialized for, but not limited to, the visualization and analysis of grazing-incidence thin-film X-ray diffraction data obtained during sample rotation around the surface normal. GIDVis allows the user to perform detector calibration, data stitching, intensity corrections, standard data evaluation (e.g. cuts and integrations along specific reciprocal-space directions), crystal phase analysis etc. To take full advantage of the measured data in the case of sample rotation, pole figures can easily be calculated from the experimental data for any value of the scattering angle covered. As an example, GIDVis is applied to phase analysis and the evaluation of the epitaxial alignment of pentacenequinone crystallites on a single-crystalline Au(111) surface.
The formation of unknown polymorphs due to the crystallization at a substrate surface is frequently observed. This phenomenon is much less studied for epitaxially grown molecular crystals since the unambiguous proof of a new polymorph is a challenging task. The existence of multiple epitaxial alignments of the crystallites together with the simultaneous presence of different polymorphs does not allow simple phase identification. We present grazing incidence X-ray diffraction studies on conjugated molecules like perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA), pentacene, dibenzopentacene (trans-DBPen), and dicyanovinylquater-thiophene (DCV4T-Et2) grown by physical vapor deposition on single crystalline surfaces like Ag(111), Cu(111), and graphene. A new method for indexing the observed Bragg peaks allows the determination of the crystallographic unit cells so that the type of crystallographic phase can be clearly identified. This approach even works when several polymorphs are simultaneously present within a single sample as shown for DCV4T-Et2 on Ag(111). Additionally, epitaxial relationships between the epitaxially grown crystallites and the single crystalline surfaces are determined. In a subsequent step, the experimental data are used for the crystal structure solution of an unknown polymorph, as shown for the example trans-DBPen grown on Cu(111).
The fabrication of nanomaterials involves self-ordering processes of functional molecules on inorganic surfaces. To obtain specific molecular arrangements, a common strategy is to equip molecules with functional groups. However, focusing on the functional groups alone does not provide a comprehensive picture. Especially at interfaces, processes that govern self-ordering are complex and involve various physical and chemical effects, often leading to unexpected structures, as we showcase here on the example of a homologous series of quinones on Ag(111). Naively, one could expect that such quinones, which all bear the same functionalization, form similar motifs. In salient contrast, our joint theoretical and experimental study shows that profoundly different structures are formed. Using a machine-learning-based structure search algorithm, we find that this is due to a shift of the balance of three antagonizing driving forces: adsorbate–substrate interactions governing adsorption sites, adsorbate–adsorbate interactions favoring close packing, and steric hindrance inhibiting certain otherwise energetically beneficial molecular arrangements. The theoretical structures show excellent agreement with our experimental characterizations of the organic/inorganic interfaces, both for the unit cell sizes and the orientations of the molecules within. The nonintuitive interplay of similarly important interaction mechanisms will continue to be a challenging aspect for the design of functional interfaces. With a detailed examination of all driving forces, we are, however, still able to devise a design principle for self-assembly of functionalized molecules.
Crystal structure identification of thin organic films entails a number of technical and methodological challenges. In particular, if molecular crystals are epitaxially grown on single-crystalline substrates a complex scenario of multiple preferred orientations of the adsorbate, several symmetry-related in-plane alignments and the occurrence of unknown polymorphs is frequently observed. In theory, the parameters of the reduced unit cell and its orientation can simply be obtained from the matrix of three linearly independent reciprocal-space vectors. However, if the sample exhibits unit cells in various orientations and/or with different lattice parameters, it is necessary to assign all experimentally obtained reflections to their associated individual origin. In the present work, an effective algorithm is described to accomplish this task in order to determine the unit-cell parameters of complex systems comprising different orientations and polymorphs. This method is applied to a polycrystalline thin film of the conjugated organic material 6,13-pentacenequinone (PQ) epitaxially grown on an Ag(111) surface. All reciprocal vectors can be allocated to unit cells of the same lattice constants but grown in various orientations [sixfold rotational symmetry for the contact planes (102) and (102)]. The as-determined unit cell is identical to that reported in a previous study determined for a fibre-textured PQ film. Preliminary results further indicate that the algorithm is especially effective in analysing epitaxially grown crystallites not only for various orientations, but also if different polymorphs are present in the film.
2D materials such as hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) are widely used to decouple organic molecules from metal substrates. Nevertheless, there are also indications in the literature for a significant hybridization, which results in a perturbation of the intrinsic molecular properties. In this work we study the electronic and optical properties as well as the lateral structure of tetraphenyldibenzoperiflanthene (DBP) on Ni(111) with and without an atomically thin h-BN interlayer to investigate its possible decoupling effect. To this end, we use in situ differential reflectance spectroscopy as an established method to distinguish between hybridized and decoupled molecules. By inserting an h-BN interlayer we fabricate a buried interface and show that the DBP molecules are well decoupled from the Ni(111) surface. Furthermore, a highly ordered DBP monolayer is obtained on h-BN/Ni(111) by depositing the molecules at a substrate temperature of 170 °C. The structural results are obtained by quantitative low-energy electron diffraction and low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy. Finally, the investigation of the valence band structure by ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the low work function of h-BN/Ni(111) further decreases after the DBP deposition. For this reason, the h-BN-passivated Ni(111) surface may serve as potential n-type contact for future molecular electronic devices.
Ellagic acid (EA), an antioxidant from fruits or other plants, has recently evoked interest in the field of organic electronics because of its weak electron donor properties. In this work, the preparation of uniaxial π-stacked EA films by thermal evaporation on different surfaces is reported for the first time. The (102) lattice plane of the π-electron system was confirmed as the contact plane for one monolayer equivalent on Ag(111) by lowelectron energy diffraction. X-ray and atomic force microscopy measurements revealed nanocrystalline grains with an average inplane size of 50 nm and considerably smaller average out-of-plane crystallite sizes (16−25 nm) in films of 16−75 nm thickness. The influence of different substrates was minor compared to the effect of the film thickness. An increase in the in-plane density of grains at larger film thicknesses was deduced from the trend in their uniaxial optical properties. Weak and strong intermolecular H-bonding interactions were identified in the EA crystal lattice, while a surplus of weak H-bonding was observed for the nanocrystallites in thin films, as compared to bulk EA. Finally, EA was coevaporated with the semiconducting thiophene molecule DCV4T-Et 2 to demonstrate principle interactions with a guest molecule by H-bonding analysis. Our results illustrate the feasibility of applying EA films as alignment layers for templating other semiconducting organic films used in organic electronic devices.
The epitaxial growth of molecular crystals at single-crystalline surfaces is often strongly related to the first monolayer at the substrate surface. The present work presents a theoretical approach to compare three-dimensional lattices of epitaxially grown crystals with two-dimensional lattices of the molecules formed within the first monolayer. Real-space and reciprocal-space representations are considered. Depending on the crystallographic orientation relative to the substrate surface, proper linear combinations of the lattice vectors of the three-dimensional unit cell result in a rhomboid in the xy plane, representing a two-dimensional projection. Mathematical expressions are derived which provide a relationship between the six lattice parameters of the three-dimensional case and the three parameters obtained for the two-dimensional surface unit cell. It is found that rotational symmetries of the monolayers are reflected by the epitaxial order. Positive and negative orientations of the crystallographic contact planes are correlated with the mirror symmetry of the surface unit cells, and the corresponding mathematical expressions are derived. The method is exemplarily applied to data obtained in previous grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements with sample rotation on thin films of the conjugated molecules 3,4;9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA), 6,13-pentacenequinone (P2O), 1,2;8,9-dibenzopentacene (trans-DBPen) and dicyanovinyl-quaterthiophene (DCV4T-Et2) grown by physical vapor deposition on Ag(111) and Cu(111) single crystals. This work introduces the possibility to study three-dimensional crystal growth nucleated by an ordered monolayer by combining two different experimental techniques, GIXD and low-energy electron diffraction, which has been implemented in the second part of this work.
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