The Role of Thermal Activation and Molecular Structure on the Reaction of Molecular Surfaces.

Langmuir

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Loyola University Chicago, 1032 West Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois 60660, United States.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights that modifying organic thin films can significantly enhance the performance of optoelectronic devices but poses unique challenges compared to traditional inorganic surfaces.
  • It finds that large molecules can still access the subsurface of pentacene, and that reactions can occur in three different areas (surface, subsurface, and bulk) within a specific temperature range (30-75 °C).
  • The research uses advanced techniques to connect the reaction kinetics with how different adsorbates interact with the thin film, suggesting that these interactions are governed by factors like reactivity and diffusivity rather than just chemical barriers, which could inform future developments in flexible electronic devices.

Article Abstract

Though surface modifications of organic thin films dramatically improve optoelectronic device performance, chemistry at organic surfaces presents new challenges that are not seen in conventional inorganic surfaces. This work demonstrates that the subsurface of pentacene remains highly accessible, even to large adsorbates, and that three distinct reaction regimes (surface, subsurface, and bulk) are accessed within the narrow thermal range of 30-75 °C. Progression of this transition is quantitatively measured via polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy is used to measure the thin-film morphology. Together, they reveal the close relationship between the extent of the reaction and the morphology changes. Finally, the reaction kinetics of the pentacene thin film is measured with a series of adsorbates that have different reactivity and diffusivity in the thin film. The results suggest that reaction kinetics in the thin film is controlled by both the reactivity and the adsorbate diffusivity in the thin-film lattice, which is very different than the traditional solution kinetics that is dominated by the chemical activation barriers. Combined, these experiments guide efforts toward rationally functionalizing the surfaces of organic semiconductors to enable the next generation of flexible devices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02099DOI Listing

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