| Literature DB >> 29482328 |
Renato Buzio1, Andrea Gerbi1, Mario Barra2, Fabio Chiarella2, Enrico Gnecco3, Antonio Cassinese2.
Abstract
We report high-resolution surface morphology and friction force maps of polycrystalline organic thin films derived by deposition of the n-type perylene diimide semiconductor PDI8-CN2. We show that the in-plane molecular arrangement into ordered, cofacial slip-stacked rows results in a largely anisotropic surface structure, with a characteristic sawtooth corrugation of a few Ångstroms wavelength and height. Load-controlled experiments reveal different types of friction contrast between the alternating sloped and stepped regions, with transitions from atomic-scale dissipative stick-slip to smooth sliding with ultralow friction within the surface unit cell. Notably, such a rich phenomenology is captured under ambient conditions. We demonstrate that friction contrast is well reproduced by numerical simulations assuming a reduced corrugation of the tip-molecule potential nearby the step edges. We propose that the side alkyl chains pack into a compact low-surface-energy overlayer, and friction modulation reflects periodic heterogeneity of chains bending properties and subsurface anchoring to the perylene cores.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29482328 DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b04149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Langmuir ISSN: 0743-7463 Impact factor: 3.882