Two-dimensional self-assembly of benzotriazole on an inert substrate

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Abstract

The ultra-high vacuum (UHV) room temperature adsorption of benzotriazole (BTAH), a well-known corrosion inhibitor for copper, has been investigated on the pristine Au(111) surface using a combination of surface sensitive techniques. The dimensionality of the molecule is reduced from the 3D crystal structure to a 2-dimensional surface confinement, which induces the formation of hydrogen bonded 1-dimensional molecular chains consisting of alternating pro-S and pro-R enantiomers mainly. The 0-dimensional system is characteristic of gas-phase BTAH, which undergoes a tautomeric equilibrium, with consequences for the resulting adsorbed species. The balance between hydrogen bonding, inter-chain van der Waals interactions and surface-molecule interactions, and the correlation with the dimensionality of the system, are discussed in light of the experimental results and a computational description of the observed features.

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Grillo, F., Garrido Torres, J. A., Treanor, M. J., Larrea, C. R., Götze, J. P., Lacovig, P., … Richardson, N. V. (2016). Two-dimensional self-assembly of benzotriazole on an inert substrate. Nanoscale, 8(17), 9167–9177. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6nr00821f

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