The impact of grafted surface defects and their controlled removal on supramolecular self-assembly

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Abstract

We demonstrate the use of covalently modified graphite as a convenient and powerful test-bed for the versatile investigation and control of 2-D crystallization at the liquid solid interface. Grafted aryls act as surface defects and create barriers to supramolecular self-assembly. An easily tunable grafting density allows for varying the effect of such defects on supramolecular self-assembly. Finally, the defects can be locally removed, triggering monolayer reconstructions and allowing in situ investigations of thermodynamically unstable or metastable morphologies.

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Bragança, A. M., Greenwood, J., Ivasenko, O., Phan, T. H., Müllen, K., & De Feyter, S. (2016). The impact of grafted surface defects and their controlled removal on supramolecular self-assembly. Chemical Science, 7(12), 7028–7033. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sc02400a

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