4.5 Article

Real-space imaging of several molecular layers of C60 in the rotational glass phase

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 35, Issue 40, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-648X/ace22b

Keywords

fullerene; orientational order; spin glass; frustration; scanning tunneling microscopy

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C-60 is a model system used to study molecule-surface interactions and phase transitions. It exhibits high symmetry and strong covalent and pi bonding within the molecule, while weak van-der-Waals coupling is present between neighboring molecules. The orientation of C-60 represents classic spins and serves as a model for disordered spin systems with frustration. Scanning tunneling microscopy reveals the rotational structure of C-60 islands on graphite, showing a combination of rotationally ordered and disordered layers. The weak interactions between neighboring molecules are confirmed by scanning tunneling spectroscopy data.
C-60 is a model system to study molecule-surface interactions and phase transitions due to its high symmetry and strong covalent & pi; bonding within the molecule versus weak van-der-Waals coupling between neighboring molecules. In the solid, at room temperature, the molecule rotates and behaves as a sphere. However, the pentagonal and hexagonal atomic arrangement imposes deviations from the spherical symmetry that become important at low temperatures. The orientation of the C-60 can be viewed to represent classic spins. For geometrical reasons the preferred orientation of neighboring C-60 cannot be satisfied for all of the neighboring molecules, making C-60 a model for disordered spin systems with frustration. We study several molecular layers of C-60 islands on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite using scanning tunneling microscopy at liquid nitrogen temperatures. By imaging several layers we obtain a limited access to the three-dimensional rotational structure of the molecules in an island. We find one rotationally disordered layer between two partially rotationally ordered layers with hexagonal patterns. This exotic pattern shows an example of the local distribution of order and disorder in geometrically frustrated systems. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy data confirms the weak interactions of neighboring molecules.

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