4.8 Article

How Surface Bonding and Repulsive Interactions Cause Phase Transformations: Ordering of a Prototype Macrocyclic Compound on Ag(111)

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 3139-3149

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn305487c

Keywords

porphyrin; porphine; repulsion; self-assembly; scanning tunneling microscopy; near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure; interface; photoelectron spectroscopy; charge transfer

Funding

  1. ERC [247299]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [BA 3395/2-1]
  3. Munich Center for Advanced Photonics (MAP)
  4. Technische Universitat Munchen
  5. Institute for Advanced Study
  6. German Excellence Initiative
  7. Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship [274842]

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We investigated the surface bonding and ordering of free-base porphine (2H-P), the parent compound of all porphyrins, on a smooth noble metal support. Our multitechnique investigation reveals a surprisingly rich and complex behavior, induding intramolecular proton switching, repulsive intermolecular interactions, and density-driven phase transformations. For small concentrations, molecular-level observations using low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy dearly show the operation of repulsive interactions between 2H-P molecules in direct contact with the employed Ag(111) surface, preventing the formation of islands. An increase of the molecular coverage results in a continuous decrease of the average intermolecular distance, correlated with multiple phase transformations: the system evolves from an isotropic, gas-like configuration via a fluid-like phase to a crystalline structure, which finally gives way to a disordered layer. Herein, considerable site-specific molecule substrate interactions, favoring an exclusive adsorption on bridge positions of the Ag(111) lattice, play an important role. Accordingly, the 2D assembly of 2H-P/Ag(111) layers is dictated by the balance between adsorption energy maximization while retaining a single adsorption site counteracted by the repulsive molecule molecule interactions. The long-range repulsion is associated with a charge redistribution at the 2H-P/Ag(111) interface comprising a partial filling of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, resulting in long-range electrostatic interactions between the adsorbates. Indeed, 2H-P molecules in the second layer that are electronically only weakly coupled to the Ag substrate show no repulsive behavior, but form dense-packed islands.

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