Title: Organic Molecules on Insulating Surfaces Investigated by NC-AFM
1Organic Molecules on Insulating Surfaces
Investigated by NC-AFM
June 10th, 2006 ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- Enrico Gnecco
- NCCR Nanoscale Science
- University of Basel, Switzerland
2Motivations
I
molecule
electrodes
3Motivations
- Advantage
- Insulating spacers (porphyrins, landers)
-
I
molecule
electrodes
metallic substrate
- Disadvantage
- Spacers adaptation to the substrate ? changes in
the electronic properties
? Insulating surfaces are potentially good
candidates
4UHV atomic force microscope
- Surface preparation in vacuum
- Light-beam adjusted by motorized mirrors
L. Howald et al., APL 63 (1993) 117
5Observing organic molecules with AFMintrinsic
problems
- The vertical resolution is the same but...
- Long range contribution is detrimental for
lateral resolution - The tip sharpness is critical
6Observing organic molecules with AFMintrinsic
problems
7Despite the problems...
- Energetics of a single molecule can be studied
8Switching to insulators...
- Atomic resolution on KBr(100)
a 0.66 nm b 0.47 nm
5 nm
9Trapping the molecules...
- How to reduce the mobility of the molecules?
10Cu-TBPP on KBr(100)
- ½ ML on KBr(100) at room temperature
- The steps are decorated by molecular wires
- No evidence of internal structures
? The mobility of the molecules is still high
11Lowering the mobility...
- KBr(100) irradiated with 1 kV e- at 120 C
- Rectangular holes (10 nm wide)
- Mono-layer depth (0.33 nm)
? Holes as molecular traps?
12Legless molecules in the holes
- The holes are empty or (partially) filled
- No resolution of single molecules
13Towards polar molecules...
- Three fold symmetry
- Charge of the chlorine ?0.42 e
14SubPC molecules on e--irradiated KBr
15Molecular confinement
- Height of the islands 0.6 nm ( hole depth 1
nm)
16Matching the substrate...
- Potential arrangement of the molecules
- Apparent size 1 nm
- Alignment along the 110 axis
17Understanding the trapping mechanism
- A dipole d 1 debye can be trapped at the
corner site! - (U ?dE 8 kBT)
18Interpretation
- Expected arrangement of the molecules
- The sign of the corner site selects the growth
direction
- Dipole-dipole interaction Dipole-substrate
interaction
- Both interactions are gt kBT ? molecular
confinement
- Mismatch at edges due to 3-fold symmetry
19Empty vs filled holes
150 nm
- Only the holes lt 15 nm in size are filled !
20Conclusions
- Holes created by e- irradiation on KBr act as
molecular traps - Single organic molecules on insulators have been
resolved by AFM - The size of the holes is critical
21Acknowledgments
UNI Basel Ernst Meyer Christoph Gerber Laurent
Nony () Alexis Baratoff Roland Bennewitz
() Oliver Pfeiffer Thomas Young
University of Tokyo T. Eguchi CNRS Toulouse A.
Gourdon C. Joachim
() Now at Univ. Aix-Marseille III, France ()
Now at McGill Univ., Montreal, Canada
- This work was supported by
- The Swiss National Science Fundation
- The Swiss National Center of Competence in
Research on Nanoscale Science