We
report the energy level alignment evolution of valence and conduction
bands of armchair-oriented graphene nanoribbons (aGNR) as their band
gap shrinks with increasing width. We use 4,4″-dibromo-para-terphenyl as the molecular precursor on Au(111) to
form extended poly-para-phenylene nanowires, which
can subsequently be fused sideways to form atomically precise aGNRs
of varying widths. We measure the frontier bands by means of scanning
tunneling spectroscopy, corroborating that the nanoribbon’s
band gap is inversely proportional to their width. Interestingly,
valence bands are found to show Fermi level pinning as the band gap
decreases below a threshold value around 1.7 eV. Such behavior is
of critical importance to understand the properties of potential contacts
in GNR-based devices. Our measurements further reveal a particularly
interesting system for studying Fermi level pinning by modifying an
adsorbate’s band gap while maintaining an almost unchanged
interface chemistry defined by substrate and adsorbate.
Contributing to the need for new
graphene nanoribbon (GNR) structures
that can be synthesized with atomic precision, we have designed a
reactant that renders chiral (3,1)-GNRs after a multistep reaction
including Ullmann coupling and cyclodehydrogenation. The nanoribbon
synthesis has been successfully proven on different coinage metals,
and the formation process, together with the fingerprints associated
with each reaction step, has been studied by combining scanning tunneling
microscopy, core-level spectroscopy, and density functional calculations.
In addition to the GNR’s chiral edge structure, the substantial
GNR lengths achieved and the low processing temperature required to
complete the reaction grant this reactant extremely interesting properties
for potential applications.
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