Epitaxy and chainlength dependent strain in self-assembled monolayers
- 22 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 106 (4) , 1600-1608
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.473281
Abstract
We use grazing incidence x-ray diffraction to systematically study the structure of an archetypal self-assembled monolayer as a function of the hydrocarbon chain length, n. The monolayers consists of n-alkyl thiol molecules, CH3(CH2)n−1SH (Cn, 10⩽n⩽30), self-assembled on single crystal Au(111) surfaces. At room temperature, the 2D structure is described by a C(4×2) unit mesh for all chain lengths. However, we demonstrate that there is a systematic dependence of the tilt structure (i.e., the tilt angle and tilt direction) of the hydrocarbon chains as a function of the chain length. Furthermore, we show that the monolayer structures are characterized by distinct “long’’ (n⩾16) and “short’’ (n⩽14) chain length regimes, as well as a smooth variation of the structural parameters within each regime. We associate these systematic structural changes with the conflicting requirements of epitaxy and molecular packing, and argue that the driving force is the changing intra-layer interaction strength (which is proportional to hydrocarbon chain length). We believe that these phenomena should be characteristic of the behavior of self-assembled monolayers, as well as the more general class of “soft/hard’’ interfaces.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Head–tail competition and modulated structures in planar surfactant (Langmuir–Blodgett) filmsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1994
- The c(4X2) Superlattice of n-Alkanethiol Monolayers Self-Assembled on Au(111)Langmuir, 1994
- Rotator phases of the normal alkanes: An x-ray scattering studyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1993
- Formation of self-assembled monolayers of n-alkanethiols on gold: a scanning tunneling microscopy study on the modification of substrate morphologyLangmuir, 1993
- Synthesis, Structure, and Properties of Model Organic SurfacesAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1992
- Atomic scale imaging of alkanethiolate monolayers at gold surfaces with atomic force microscopyJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1992
- Fundamental studies of microscopic wetting on organic surfaces. 1. Formation and structural characterization of a self-consistent series of polyfunctional organic monolayersJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1990
- Formation of monolayer films by the spontaneous assembly of organic thiols from solution onto goldJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1989
- Molecular monolayers and films. A panel report for the Materials Sciences Division of the Department of EnergyLangmuir, 1987
- Theory of lipid monolayer and bilayer chain-melting phase transitionsFaraday Discussions of the Chemical Society, 1986