4.8 Article

Ambipolar charge transfer of larger fullerenes enabled by the modulated surface potential of h-BN/Rh(111)

Journal

CARBON
Volume 216, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2023.118592

Keywords

Fullerenes; 2D materials; Ambipolar charge transfer; Intermolecular interactions; Organic hybrid electronics; Scanning tunneling microscopy; Non-contact atomic force microscopy

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A detailed understanding of the interaction between molecules and two-dimensional materials is crucial for incorporating functional molecular films into next-generation 2D material-organic hybrid devices. This study compares the energy level alignment of different-sized fullerenes on a Moire superstructure and finds that C-84 fullerenes can be either neutral or negatively charged depending on slight variations of the electrostatic potential. This discovery suggests a new path to achieve ambipolar charge transfer without overcoming the electronic gap of fullerenes.
A detailed understanding of how molecules interact with two-dimensional materials, particularly concerning energy level alignment and charge transfer processes, is essential to incorporate functional molecular films into next-generation 2D material-organic hybrid devices. One of the major challenges in integrating molecular films in field-effect transistors is facilitating ambipolar charge transport, which is often hindered by the large electronic gap of the organic layers. This work compares the adsorption site-dependent energy level alignment of C-60, C-70, and C-84 fullerenes induced by the spatial variation of the electrostatic surface potential of the h-BN/Rh(111) Moire superstructure. As the size of the fullerenes increases, the HOMO-LUMO gap shrinks. In the case of C-84, we find an intrinsic charge transfer from the substrate to the fullerenes adsorbed in the Moire pore centers, rendering them negatively charged. The electric field effect-induced charging of neutral fullerenes and discharging of intrinsically negatively charged fullerenes are investigated using scanning tunneling spectroscopy, non-contact atomic force microscopy, and Kelvin probe force spectroscopy. Our findings show that on metal-supported h-BN, the LUMO level of C-84 is sufficiently close to the Fermi energy that it can be neutral or 1e(-) negatively charged depending on slight variations of the electrostatic potential. The findings propose a path to make ambipolar charge transfer accessible and efficient by circumventing the need to overcome the fullerenes' electronic gap.

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