Unveiling Adatoms in On-Surface Reactions: Combining Scanning Probe Microscopy with van't Hoff Plots.
Juan Carlos Moreno-LópezAlejandro Pérez PazStefano GottardiLeonid SolianykJun LiLeticia MonjasAnna Katharina Herta HirschDuncan John MowbrayMeike StöhrPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. C, Nanomaterials and interfaces (2021)
Scanning probe microscopy has become an essential tool to not only study pristine surfaces but also on-surface reactions and molecular self-assembly. Nonetheless, due to inherent limitations, some atoms or (parts of) molecules are either not imaged or cannot be unambiguously identified. Herein, we discuss the arrangement of two different nonplanar molecular assemblies of para-hexaphenyl-dicarbonitrile (Ph6(CN)2) on Au(111) based on a combined theoretical and experimental approach. For deposition of Ph6(CN)2 on Au(111) kept at room temperature, a rhombic nanoporous network stabilized by a combination of hydrogen bonding and antiparallel dipolar coupling is formed. Annealing at 575 K resulted in an irreversible thermal transformation into a hexagonal nanoporous network stabilized by native gold adatoms. However, the Au adatoms could neither be unequivocally identified by scanning tunneling microscopy nor by noncontact atomic force microscopy. By combining van't Hoff plots derived from our scanning probe images with our density functional theory calculations, we were able to confirm the presence of the elusive Au adatoms in the hexagonal molecular network.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- high resolution
- atomic force microscopy
- density functional theory
- living cells
- room temperature
- high speed
- sensitive detection
- electron microscopy
- quantum dots
- reduced graphene oxide
- optical coherence tomography
- molecular dynamics
- high throughput
- ionic liquid
- label free
- lymph node metastasis
- deep learning
- convolutional neural network
- fluorescent probe
- escherichia coli
- biofilm formation
- network analysis
- pseudomonas aeruginosa