The adsorption and self-assembling properties of terephthalic
acid
(TPA) molecules deposited on Cu(001) at room temperature have been
systematically studied with both experimental and theoretical tools.
The system forms two phases at room temperature: the metastable β-phase
and the stable (3 × 3) one. In the case of the β phase,
low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy
(STM) results indicate that it has a (9√2 × 2√2) R45° unit cell with exactly the same molecular coverage
as the (3 × 3) phase. In addition, the high-resolution X-ray
photoelectron-spectroscopy spectra of the O 1s core level indicate
that the irreversible β → (3 × 3) transition involves
the following two processes: (i) deprotonation of the complete carboxyl
groups remaining in the metastable phase and (ii) eventual rearrangement
of the molecules into the 3 × 3 configuration. We explored possible
molecular configurations for the β phase with different degree
of deprotonation (including structures with Cu adatoms) by means of
density functional theory calculations. Our theoretical results indicate
the formation of strong bonds between the O atoms in carboxylates
and the Cu atoms of the surface, which causes a bending of the molecules
and a buckling of the first Cu layer. In the (3 × 3) phases,
we show that the bending produces observable effects in the molecular
STM images. Moreover, the strong interaction between the carboxylates
and the Cu atoms at the step edges drives the reorientation of the
surface steps along the ⟨100⟩ crystallographic directions.
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