EPITAXIAL THIN-FILMS OF LARGE ORGANIC-MOLECULES - CHARACTERIZATION OFPHTHALOCYANINE AND CORONENE OVERLAYERS ON THE LAYERED SEMICONDUCTORS MOS2 AND SNS2
Cd. England et al., EPITAXIAL THIN-FILMS OF LARGE ORGANIC-MOLECULES - CHARACTERIZATION OFPHTHALOCYANINE AND CORONENE OVERLAYERS ON THE LAYERED SEMICONDUCTORS MOS2 AND SNS2, Langmuir, 10(8), 1994, pp. 2748-2756
Ordered overlayers of large organic molecules have been studied on the
basal planes of freshly cleaved metal dichalcogenides such as MoS2 or
SnS2. Low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) has been used to charact
erize the growth of copper (CuPc) and chloroindium (InPcCl) phthalocya
nine and coronene on these substrates, at coverages up to ca. two mono
layers. InPcCl and CuPc films form square lattice nets on both SnS2 an
d MoS2, with lattice vectors aligned along (PHI = 0-degrees, MoS2) or
near (PHI = +/- 4-degrees, SnS2) the principal lattice vectors of the
metal dichalcogenide (0001) surface, resulting in 3-6 equivalent Pc do
mains. Ordered coronene films on MoS2 consist of two hexagonal lattice
domains rotated by +/- 13.9-degrees from each principal axis of the (
0001) surface Of MoS2. Modeling studies were conducted for adsorbed co
ronene on MoS2 and for InPcCl on both MoS2 and SnS2, where purely van
der Waals forces were presumed to be responsible for the orientation o
f the epitaxial layers of these organic materials. By summing van der
Waals interactions over surface lattices of up to nine molecules, it i
s possible to show that small differences in the binding site, repulsi
ve and attractive interactions between molecules, and sulfur-sulfur sp
acing in the MoS2 or SnS2 basal plane may be responsible for the orien
tations of the first close-packed monolayers.