Scanning tunneling microscopy and X-ray spectroscopy measurements are combined to first-principles simulations to investigate the formation of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) on Au(110), as based on the surface-mediated reaction of 10,10?-dibromo-9,9?-bianthracene (DBBA) molecules. At variance with Au(111), two different pathways are identified for the GNR self-assembly on Au(110), as controlled by both the adsorption temperature and the surface coverage of the DBBA molecular precursors. Room-temperature DBBA deposition on Au(110) leads to the same reaction steps obtained on Au(111), even though with lower activation temperatures. For DBBA deposition at 470 K, the cyclodehydrogenation of the precursors preceds their polymerization, and the GNR formation is fostered by increasing the surface coverage. While the initial stages of the reaction are found to crucially determine the final configuration and orientation of the GNRs, the molecular diffusion is found to limit in both cases the formation of high-density long-range ordered GNRs. Overall, the direct comparison between the Au(110) and Au(111) surfaces unveils the delicate interplay among the different factors driving the growth of GNRs.

Surface-assisted reactions toward formation of graphene nanoribbons on Au(110) surface

Cardoso C;Prezzi D;Molinari E;Ferretti A;
2015

Abstract

Scanning tunneling microscopy and X-ray spectroscopy measurements are combined to first-principles simulations to investigate the formation of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) on Au(110), as based on the surface-mediated reaction of 10,10?-dibromo-9,9?-bianthracene (DBBA) molecules. At variance with Au(111), two different pathways are identified for the GNR self-assembly on Au(110), as controlled by both the adsorption temperature and the surface coverage of the DBBA molecular precursors. Room-temperature DBBA deposition on Au(110) leads to the same reaction steps obtained on Au(111), even though with lower activation temperatures. For DBBA deposition at 470 K, the cyclodehydrogenation of the precursors preceds their polymerization, and the GNR formation is fostered by increasing the surface coverage. While the initial stages of the reaction are found to crucially determine the final configuration and orientation of the GNRs, the molecular diffusion is found to limit in both cases the formation of high-density long-range ordered GNRs. Overall, the direct comparison between the Au(110) and Au(111) surfaces unveils the delicate interplay among the different factors driving the growth of GNRs.
2015
Istituto Nanoscienze - NANO
Inglese
119
5
2427
2437
11
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jp509415r
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Scanning tunneling microscopy
graphene nanoribbons
(DBBA) molecules
13
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Massimi, L; Ourdjini, O; Lafferentz, L; Koch, M E; Grill, L; Cavaliere, E; Gavioli, L; Cardoso, C; Prezzi, D; Molinari, E; Ferretti, A; Mariani, C; Be...espandi
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
   Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe
   PRACE
   FP7
   211528

   Atomic Scale and single Molecule Logic gate Technologies
   ATMOL
   FP7
   270028
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/286077
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