IntroductionFor the study of surface phenomena at various interfaces, the total internal reflection (TIR) condition has been used in a number of spectroscopic measurements, 1 such as fluorometry, 2-9 surface enhanced infrared spectroscopy (SEIRA), [10][11][12] second harmonic generation, [13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21] and sum frequency generation (SFG). [22][23][24][25] There are two advantages when one uses the TIR condition. First, both incident light to the interface and reflected light or generated light from the interface travel in only one of the two phases adjacent to the interface, which circumvents bulk absorption by the other phase. One corollary is the freedom of changing the composition of the adjacent phase that has a lower refractive index. Second, high sensitivity to the interfaces can be achieved owing to the enhancement of the electric field at the interfaces. 1 The TIR arrangement can be employed at metal interfaces if a very thin metal film is used to avoid the absorption of light. It has been successfully employed to detect adsorbed species on metal in the SEIRA, where the thickness of the metal film is about 10 nm on a transparent substrate. [10][11][12] Recently, Williams et al. showed that the TIR arrangement can also be employed to detect SFG signals from alkanethiols adsorbed on a thin gold film. 24 However, detailed analysis of the sum frequency vibrational spectra has not been reported. SFG in the TIR arrangement has some potential as a powerful tool to study molecular orientations at metal/liquid interfaces, such as electrochemical interfaces, because it is free from bulk absorption and has interfacial sensitivity in the order of nanometers. Unlike surface plasmon resonance and capacitance measurements that have been used as sensitive means of detecting adsorption and molecular interaction at the interfaces, TIR-SFG will enable us to obtain molecular information on the solution side of the interfaces. One drawback of the TIR arrangement is the roughness of the metal surfaces. The roughness is prerequisite for high sensitivity and can complicate the interpretation of the experimental data because of the orientational distribution of molecules in comparison with those adsorbed on a single crystal surface. It is therefore of crucial importance to assess the degree of the variation in orientation of molecules.By using broad-bandwidth sum frequency generation (BBSFG) [26][27][28] we recently analyzed the orientation of alkanethiols adsorbed on Au(111).
29It is worthwhile to examine the applicability of BBSFG in the TIR condition at metal interfaces to obtain SFG spectra with higher resolution. In the present paper, we report the results of TIR-BBSFG measurements for hexadecanethiol (HDT) adsorbed on a thin gold film on CaF2. We will show that BBSFG can be successfully employed in the orientation analysis of the HDT molecules and that the methyl groups of HDT are much more randomly orientated than those on Au(111) on mica.
Experimental
SubstrateA hemicylindrical CaF2 prism (Pier Optic...