Sub-Monolayer Annealed CuPc on Cu(111): Defect Hindered Dynamic Clusters

ORAL

Abstract

Annealed sub-monolayer copper phthalocyanine on Cu(111) was studied with room temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and density functional theory (DFT). At coverages of 0.25 ML we observed that annealing produces a disordered cluster network of CuPc that attach together by forming C-C bonds across isoindole lobes. At lower coverages we find that smaller CuPc clusters (less than ~20 CuPc in size) are mobile on the Cu(111) surface. This dynamic motion was tracked by repeated STM image scans. Subsequent deposition of CuPc (without annealing) produced a Cu(111) surface covered with highly mobile single CuPc molecules and less mobile CuPc clusters. This enabled resolution of surface defects that were found to immobilize the CuPc clusters through a defect pinning mechanism.

*Funded by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), Canada Foundation for Innovation, Hart Professorship, Government of Ontario, Fed Dev Ontario, and University of Toronto. Computations used the Niagara Compute Canada facility.

Presenters

  • William Huxter

    • Materials Science and Engineering, University of Toronto

Authors

  • William Huxter

    • Materials Science and Engineering, University of Toronto
  • Jun Nogami

    • Materials Science and Engineering, University of Toronto
  • Chandra Veer Singh

    • Materials Science and Engineering, University of Toronto