6533b82efe1ef96bd1293b26

RESEARCH PRODUCT

In-situ study of multi-phase indium nanoparticle growth on/into CuPcF4 organic thin film in ultra-high vacuum conditions

Anna A. MakarovaV. Yu. AristovA.n ChaikaO. V. MolodtsovaIgor I. KhodosS. BabenkovDmitry A. SmirnovI. M. AristovaD.v. PotorochinSerguei L. MolodtsovSerguei L. MolodtsovSerguei L. Molodtsov

subject

Materials scienceNanocompositeUltra-high vacuumGeneral Physics and Astronomychemistry.chemical_element02 engineering and technologySurfaces and InterfacesGeneral Chemistry010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesXANES0104 chemical sciencesSurfaces Coatings and FilmsOrganic semiconductorTetragonal crystal systemchemistryX-ray photoelectron spectroscopyChemical engineeringThin film0210 nano-technologyIndium

description

Abstract We study the in-situ growth of a nanocomposite material consisting of a thin CuPcF4 film and multiphase/multidimensional indium nanoparticles, self-organizing on the surface and in the bulk, at various stages of thermal deposition of metal on an organic film under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. The analysis of high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) images provided valuable information about the evolution of morphology, size, density, and distribution of indium nanoparticles upon indium deposition. These 2D/3D ultra-small nano-objects turned out to have not only body-centered tetragonal (bct) crystal structure, typical for bulk indium, but also unusual face-centered cubic (fcc) one. Using a synchrotron facility, the study of the electronic structure of the hybrid nanocomposite on variable stages of metal deposition was performed by XPS and NEXAFS. Core-level spectra related to the organics indicated reasonably weak chemical interaction of indium with CuPcF4 molecules, which is not the case for a number of metal/organic semiconductor systems, while valence band spectra have shown a considerable change of the material electronic properties. The energy level diagrams, derived from the experiment, can be applied for the creation of new prototypes of metal-organic memory devices.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2021.149136