Self-assembled molecular nanowires on prepatterned Ge(001) surfaces.
Jing LyuZicong Marvin WongHaicheng SunShuo-Wang YangGuo Qin XuPublished in: Chemical science (2022)
It is a long-standing goal to fabricate conductive molecular nanowires (NWs) on semiconductor surfaces. Anchoring molecules to pre-patterned surface nanostructures is a practical approach to construct molecular NWs on semiconductor surfaces. Previously, well-ordered inorganic Ge NWs were deduced to spontaneously grow onto Pt/Ge(001) surfaces after annealing at an elevated temperature. In this work, we further demonstrate that organic 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ) molecular NWs can self-assemble onto the atomic NWs on Pt/Ge(001) surfaces. The outer nitrogen atoms in TCNQ molecules hybridize with under-coordinated Ge atoms in Ge NWs with an energy release of ∼1.14 eV per molecule, and electrons transfer from Ge NWs to the frontier orbitals of anchored TCNQs resulting in a negatively charged state. This largely tailors the electronic configurations of TCNQs and Pt/Ge(001) surfaces, enhancing the electron transport along the dimer row direction. The TCNQ molecular NWs coupled with the Ge NWs represent an exemplary showcase for the fabrication of molecular NWs on semiconductor surfaces.