Tailoring the growth and electronic structures of organic molecular thin films

 · Invited

Abstract

Understanding and control of heterointerfaces between organic and inorganic materials are critical for the development of organic electronics, molecular electronics, molecular/biological sensors, and energy harvesting devices. On the one hand, achieving large-scale molecular ordering on inorganic substrates remains a significant challenge that requires a thorough understanding of the growth mechanism. On the other hand, elucidating the charge behavior, electronic structures and energy-level alignment at the heterointerfaces are crucially important for enhancing the transport properties in hybrid devices. In this talk, I will discuss our recent discovery of the anisotropic crystalline step-flow growth of the prototypical metal phthalocyanine molecules on the deactivated Si(111)-B surface. I will then address the growth mechanism and show that the molecular ordering and molecular orientation can be effectively controlled through selective orbital coupling between the molecule and substrate. Finally, I will illustrate the effects of substrate electrostatic screening, mediated by interfacial charge transfer, on molecular electronic structures and energy-level alignment at the heterointerfaces.

*We acknowledge the financial support from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science Early Career Research Program (Grant No. DE-SC0006400) through the Office of Basic Energy Sciences.

Presenters

  • Pengpeng Zhang

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University

Authors

  • Pengpeng Zhang

    • Michigan State Univ
    • Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University