“…Although the methyl group is not chemically reactive, it increases the size and complexity of the molecular structure of the amino acid, potentially introducing steric constraint, all of which could affect how alanine bonds to the surface and how it interacts with one another during film growth. Adsorption of alanine, cysteine, aspartic acid, proline, glutamic acid and methionine on single crystalline metal surfaces [Cu(110), Au(111), Ag(100), Ni(100)] and on nonreactive Si(111)- √3×√3-Ag surface, have been extensively studied by using XPS, reflection–absorption infrared spectroscopy, temperature-programmed desorption, low-energy electron diffraction, and STM. − In particular, a comprehensive adsorption phase diagram of alanine on Cu(110) has been reported to include four alaninate (NH 2 C α H(CH 3 )COO – ) phases depending on the coverage and substrate temperature . At room temperature, individual alanine molecules were found to bond tridentately to Cu(110) at low coverage through both carboxylate O atoms and the amino N atom, following deprotonation of the carboxylic acid group.…”