Scanning tunneling microscope investigations of lead–phthalocyanine on MoS2

  • Strohmaier R
  • Ludwig C
  • Petersen J
  • et al.
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Abstract

Monolayers of the nonplanar organic molecule lead–phthalocyanine (PbPc) on MoS2 have been prepared by organic molecular beam epitaxy and investigated with video scanning tunneling microscopy. Three different crystallographic phases have been observed. Two of them, the close packed and the rowlike phase, have already been observed in an earlier study of the planar Cu–Pc. With PbPc we have now observed an additional phase, where three close packed rows alternate with one or two isolated single rows. In contrast to Cu–Pc, in submolecularly resolved images the PbPc appear in two different states, with either a dark or a bright center. This is attributed to the nonplanar molecular geometry, which allows the formation of two different adsorption geometries, the Pb above or below the molecular plane. In video sequences the transition from one state into the other could be observed.

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Strohmaier, R., Ludwig, C., Petersen, J., Gompf, B., & Eisenmenger, W. (1996). Scanning tunneling microscope investigations of lead–phthalocyanine on MoS2. Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B: Microelectronics and Nanometer Structures Processing, Measurement, and Phenomena, 14(2), 1079–1082. https://doi.org/10.1116/1.588404

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