4.4 Article

Study of self-assembled triethoxysilane thin films made by casting neat reagents in ambient atmosphere

Journal

THIN SOLID FILMS
Volume 516, Issue 12, Pages 3948-3956

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.tsf.2007.07.208

Keywords

self-assembly; silane; atomic force microscopy; water contact angle; ellipsometry; sum frequency generation

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We studied four trialkoxysilane thin films, fabricated via self-assembly by casting neat silane reagents onto hydrophilic SiOx/Si substrates in the ambient. This drop-casting method is simple, yet rarely studied for the production of silane self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Various ex-situ techniques were utilized to systematically characterize the growth process: Ellipsometry measurements can monitor the evolution of film thickness with silanization time; water droplet contact angle measurements reveal the wettability; the change of surface morphology was followed by Atomic Force Microscopy; the chemical identity of the films was verified by Infrared-Visible Sum Frequency Generation spectroscopy. We show that the shorter carbon chain (propyl-) or branched (2-(diphenylphosphino)ethyl-) silane SAMs exhibit poor ordering. In contrast, longer carbon chain (octadecyl and decyl) silanes form relatively ordered monolayers. The growth of the latter two cases shows Langmuir-like kinetics and a transition process from lying-down to standing-up geometry with increasing coverage. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All fights reserved.

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