Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
The energetics of self-diffusion within ordered bilayer assemblies of linear hydrocarbons on Pt(111) (layer-to-layer) have been characterized using isothermal molecular beam-surface scattering in conjunction with temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and reflection-absorption infrared (RAIR) spectroscopies. The bilayers are prepared by layering a perdeuterated n-alkane on top of a perprotio n-alkane (or vice versa). The exchange of molecules between the two layers is weakly activated, less so than is either desorption of the multilayer from the substrate (the monolayer is more strongly bound) or the various phase transitions which lead to the loss of two-dimensional order in a corresponding densely-packed monolayer of the n-alkanes. The exchange process is further characterized by substantial size-asymmetry and isotope substitution effects which result in a preference for the selective retention of the longer and (for identical chain lengths) the protio hydrocarbon at the surface regardless of the initial deposition order. Layer-to-layer exchange occurs by a displacive mechanism which follows simple mass action principles: increasing the coverage of the post-absorbed species increases the extent of exchange. The difference in the activation energy for desorption (from the bilayer) and for exchange is ∼1.5 kcal/mol for both a C8 and C10 perdeuterated n-alkane displacing an adsorbed (protio) chain of equal length. Thus, although the activation energy for self-diffusion increases with chain length, it is always less than the activation energy for sublimation by a constant amount. The implications of these results for energy dissipation mechanisms and relaxation dynamics in organic thin films are discussed and analogies to the properties of the so-called plastic-crystalline state are developed.
The energetics of self-diffusion within ordered bilayer assemblies of linear hydrocarbons on Pt(111) (layer-to-layer) have been characterized using isothermal molecular beam-surface scattering in conjunction with temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and reflection-absorption infrared (RAIR) spectroscopies. The bilayers are prepared by layering a perdeuterated n-alkane on top of a perprotio n-alkane (or vice versa). The exchange of molecules between the two layers is weakly activated, less so than is either desorption of the multilayer from the substrate (the monolayer is more strongly bound) or the various phase transitions which lead to the loss of two-dimensional order in a corresponding densely-packed monolayer of the n-alkanes. The exchange process is further characterized by substantial size-asymmetry and isotope substitution effects which result in a preference for the selective retention of the longer and (for identical chain lengths) the protio hydrocarbon at the surface regardless of the initial deposition order. Layer-to-layer exchange occurs by a displacive mechanism which follows simple mass action principles: increasing the coverage of the post-absorbed species increases the extent of exchange. The difference in the activation energy for desorption (from the bilayer) and for exchange is ∼1.5 kcal/mol for both a C8 and C10 perdeuterated n-alkane displacing an adsorbed (protio) chain of equal length. Thus, although the activation energy for self-diffusion increases with chain length, it is always less than the activation energy for sublimation by a constant amount. The implications of these results for energy dissipation mechanisms and relaxation dynamics in organic thin films are discussed and analogies to the properties of the so-called plastic-crystalline state are developed.
The transport and structural phase dynamics exhibited by multilayer assemblies comprised of cyclic and linear alkanes are analyzed with reflection absorption infrared (RAIR) and temperature-programmed desorption spectroscopies. Infrared spectroscopy reveals that methyl group substitutions have a significant effect on the nature of the mode softening seen in the C-H stretching region for surface-bound cyclohexanes. The magnitude of the red-shifts seen increases with the degree of methyl substitution. The energetics of the surface binding do not correlate in a simple way with the magnitude of red-shifts seen in the RAIR spectra, however. We find instead that the strengths of the surface interactions are more directly correlated with both the size and shape of the molecule (with the latter presumably reflecting its ability to form a densely packed structure). We also find that the diffusion of molecules in a mixed hydrocarbon multilayer assembly is weakly activated, with substantial interlayer mixing being seen at temperatures significantly below the threshold for the desorption of the multilayer. The mixing, while driven by mass action, shows a pronounced bias for the surface binding of n-alkanes over cycloalkanes of similar molecular weight (e.g., n-octane is more strongly bound on Pt(111) than is cis-1,3-dimethylcyclohexane). The data strongly suggest that attractive lateral interactions in the adsorbed layers lead to the biases seen in this surface-induced segregation. Thermal desorption spectra confirm this sensitivity and interestingly show multiple monolayer desorption features for cyclic alkane adsorbates when mixed in a monolayer assembly with an appropriate linear n-alkane. We suggest that the attractive lateral interactions in the monolayer lead to the formation of island domains and that the desorption kinetics appear to sensitively reflect this underlying rate/structure sensitivity.
Squaraine dyes form aggregates in solution and in the solid state. We have found that squaraines form two-dimensional (2D) ordered layers when adsorbed onto HOPG from phenyloctane and from liquid crystalline solvents. We investigated with scanning tunneling microscopy the 2D structures of the adsorbed phases of five bis(4-alkylamino-2-hydroxyphenyl) squaraines (both symmetric and asymmetric) and mixtures of these squaraines. Differences in the stability of the 2D structures and molecular packing are observed when the alkyl tail length and symmetry are varied. A transition in the 2D structure from a herringbone packing to a lamellar packing occurs between the tail lengths of 4 carbons and 8 carbons. Many of the compounds form a number of 2D polytypes on HOPG. Multilayers of squaraine molecules were observed for most of the studied molecules. Squaraines with tail lengths of 12 carbons exhibited a tendency toward registry with the HOPG substrate whereas all other squaraine compounds investigated showed a lack of molecule-substrate registry. Domain sizes of the investigated molecules varied from tens of nanometers to a micron.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.