Joint Fall 2009 Meeting of the New England Section of the APS and AAPT
Volume 54, Number 11
Friday–Saturday, October 16–17, 2009;
Durham, New Hampshire
Session C1: Poster Session: APS/AAPT (5:40-7:00PM)
5:40 PM,
Friday, October 16, 2009
Holloway Commons
Chair: Mark McConnell, University of New Hampshire
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.NEF.C1.3
Abstract: C1.00003 : Molecular Self-assembly for Organic Electronics
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Authors:
Jun Wang
(University of New Hampshire)
Irvinder Kaur
(University of New Hampshire)
Bogdan Diaconescu
(University of New Hampshire)
Mikael Jazdzyk
(University of New Hampshire)
Glen P. Miller
(University of New Hampshire)
Karsten Pohl
(University of New Hampshire)
Self-assembled thin films of novel organic molecules hold the
promise of emerging technologies and applications ranging from
sensors for biological
applications to organic electronics and more efficient organic
photovoltaics. Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) form as a result
of a delicate balance
between competing molecule-substrate and intermolecular
interactions. To control such self-assembly processes, it is
mandatory to understand how this
balance reflects onto the SAM's final structure. Here we present
an ultra-high vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) study of
the self-assembly of
novel pentacene derivatives and functionalized fullerenes (F-C60)
on metal surfaces. Pentacene is known to exhibit large carrier
mobility and has been
studied extensively as a semiconductor in organic thin film
devices. However, it is subject to facile photo-oxidation that
limits device lifetime. We
recently synthesized novel pentacene derivatives that show a
dramatically increased resistance to photo-oxidation. We
identified 6,13-dichloropentacene
as a promising candidate for organic electronics. On the compact
surface of gold, 6,13-dichloropentacene forms self-assembled
domains with various
high symmetry orientations. The quality of the SAM is seem to
dramatically improve when the 6,13-dichloropentacene are
deposited on the (788) vicinal
surface of gold where the presence of parallel atomic steps will
select only one of the possible SAM orientations due to the
molecule-step interaction. Thus
we observe the formation of very large self-assembled
6,13-dichloropentacene monolayers with perfect single domain
orientation. We have also studied
the self-assembly of C60 functionalized with alkyl chains of
various lengths (F-C60) on Ag(111). We find that as a function of
the alkyl chain length
various structures are forming, ranging from zigzag like to
linear arrays of C60 fullerene cages. The symmetry and unit cell
size of the F-C60 SAMs is
dictated by the alkyl-surface and the intermolecular
interactions. These results show that C60 molecules can be
assembled in 2D and non-compact
molecular arrays with a surface density controllable via
appropriate chemical functionalization. Those structures show
promise as candidates for selfassembled
molecular junctions.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.NEF.C1.3