Spectroscopic studies of the stability of monolayers of 2-docosylamino-5-nitropyridine at the air/water interface
Monolayers of 2-docosylamino-5-nitropyridine (DCANP) at the air/water interface were investigated by UV/Vis spectroscopy. The combination of this method with the classic constant-area relaxation technique yields insight into the longtime stability and the collapse behavior of monolayers. We have demonstrated that monolayers of DCANP are certainly stable under standard deposition conditions. At surface pressures above 20 mN/m monolayer instabilities lead to the formation of a three-dimensional head-to-head multilayered structure.