AI Article Synopsis

  • - Researchers investigated how UV irradiation can preactivate TiO2 and ITO surfaces, improving the absorption of organic molecules through low-pressure evaporation.
  • - The deposition of organic molecules on these oxides was monitored using various techniques (SEM, UV-vis, XRD, RBS, and photoluminescence spectroscopy) to study the resulting patterns of organic nanowires.
  • - The study also utilized X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations to clarify the mechanisms of enhanced adsorption, and examined the creation of hybrid organic/inorganic semiconductors via controlled sublimation on mesoporous TiO2.

Article Abstract

In this article we present the preactivation of TiO2 and ITO by UV irradiation under ambient conditions as a tool to enhance the incorporation of organic molecules on these oxides by evaporation at low pressures. The deposition of π-stacked molecules on TiO2 and ITO at controlled substrate temperature and in the presence of Ar is thoroughly followed by SEM, UV-vis, XRD, RBS, and photoluminescence spectroscopy, and the effect is exploited for the patterning formation of small-molecule organic nanowires (ONWs). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) in situ experiments and molecular dynamics simulations add critical information to fully elucidate the mechanism behind the increase in the number of adsorption centers for the organic molecules. Finally, the formation of hybrid organic/inorganic semiconductors is also explored as a result of the controlled vacuum sublimation of organic molecules on the open thin film microstructure of mesoporous TiO2.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b01572DOI Listing

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