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Kinked row-induced chirality driven by molecule–substrate interactions
Author(s) -
С.В. Снегір,
Yannick J. Dappe,
Oleksiy L. Kapitanchuk,
Delphine Coursault,
Emmanuelle Lacaze
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/c9cp06519a
Subject(s) - chirality (physics) , molecule , substrate (aquarium) , crystallography , chemical physics , chemistry , physics , computational chemistry , molecular physics , materials science , nanotechnology , chiral symmetry , quantum mechanics , oceanography , geology , nambu–jona lasinio model , quark
Combining STM measurements on three different substrates (HOPG, MoS 2 , and Au[111]) together with DFT calculations allow for analysis of the origin of the self-assembly of 4-cyano-4'-n-decylbiphenyl (10CB) molecules into kinked row structures using a previously developed phenomenological model. This molecule has an alkyl chain with 10 carbons and a cyanobiphenyl group with a particularly large dipole moment. 10CB represents a toy model that we use here to unravel the relationship between the induced kinked structure, in particular the corresponding chirality expression, and the balanced intermolecular/molecule-substrate interaction. We show that the local ordered structure is driven by the typical alkyl chain/substrate interaction for HOPG and Au[111] and the cyanobiphenyl group/substrate interaction for MoS 2 . The strongest molecule/substrate interactions are observed for MoS 2 and Au[111]. These strong interactions should have led to non-kinked, commensurate adsorbed structures. However, this latter appears impossible due to steric interactions between the neighboring cyanobiphenyl groups that lead to a fan-shape structure of the cyanobiphenyl packing on the three substrates. As a result, the kink-induced chirality is particularly large on MoS 2 and Au[111]. A further breaking of symmetry is observed on Au[111] due to an asymmetry of the facing molecules in the rows induced by similar interactions with the substrate of both the alkyl chain and the cyanobiphenyl group. We calculate that the overall 10CB/Au[111] interaction is of the order of 2 eV per molecule. The close 10CB/MoS 2 interaction, in contrast, is dominated by the cyanobiphenyl group, being particularly large possibly due to dipole-dipole interactions between the cyanobiphenyl groups and the MoS 2 substrate.

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