Quinacridone (QA) has recently gained
attention as an organic semiconductor
with unexpectedly high performance in organic devices. The strong
intermolecular connection via hydrogen bonds is expected to promote
good structural order. When deposited on a substrate, another relevant
factor comes into play, namely the 2D-chirality of the quinacridone
molecules adsorbed on a surface. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)
images of monolayer quinacridone on Ag(111) deposited at room temperature
reveal the formation of quasi-one-dimensional rows of parallel quinacridone
molecules. These rows are segmented into short stacks of a few molecules
in which adjacent, flat-lying molecules of a single handedness are
linked via hydrogen bonds. After annealing to a temperature of T = 550–570 K, which is close to the sublimation
temperature of bulk quinacridone, the structure changes into a stacking
of heterochiral quinacridone dimers with a markedly different intermolecular
arrangement. Electron diffraction (LEED) and photoelectron emission
microscopy (PEEM) data corroborate the STM findings. These results
illustrate how the effects of hydrogen bonding and chirality can compete
and give rise to very different (meta)stable structures of quinacridone
on surfaces.
2-Naphthylisonitrile–gold(i)-chloride can be evaporated without decomposition and form highly ordered thin films on substrate surfaces resembling the solid state structure.
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