Molecular Reorientation of Copper Phthalocyanine Thin Films on Gold Surfaces with Controlled Roughness

ORAL

Abstract

In many organic semiconductors the optical, magnetic and electric properties in various devices and sensors are determined by the precise ordering and orientation of the molecules in crystalline thin films. One strategy to modify the molecular orientation on a metallic substrate is by changing the substrate roughness. We examine thin films of the metal-organic planar molecule, copper phthalocyanine, deposited onto Au(111) surfaces with varying roughness. The molecular alignments were measured using x-ray diffraction and the roughness was extracted from atomic force microscopy images. We find a diminishing 27.7° diffraction peak and an emergence of the 6.8° diffraction peak as surface roughness increases, suggesting a re-orientation of the molecule on the gold surface.

*This work was funded through the California State University, Long Beach and the Ohio State University Partnership for Education and Research in Topological Materials, a National Science Foundation PREM, under Grant No. 2425133.

Presenters

  • Fernanda Razo

    • California State University, Long Beach

Authors

  • Fernanda Razo

    • California State University, Long Beach
  • Erika Escobar

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, California State University Long Beach
  • Thomas Gredig

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, California State University Long Beach