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Metalloporphyrins on oxygen-passivated iron: Conformation and order beyond the first layer.

Authors :
Janas, David Maximilian
Windischbacher, Andreas
Arndt, Mira Sophie
Gutnikov, Michael
Sternemann, Lasse
Gutnikov, David
Willershausen, Till
Nitschke, Jonah Elias
Schiller, Karl
Baranowski, Daniel
Feyer, Vitaliy
Cojocariu, Iulia
Dave, Khush
Puschnig, Peter
Stupar, Matija
Ponzoni, Stefano
Cinchetti, Mirko
Zamborlini, Giovanni
Source :
Inorganica Chimica Acta. Nov2023, Vol. 557, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Porphyrin molecules electronically decoupled on a passivated surface. • Photoemission orbital tomography detects saddle-shape of metalloporphyrins. • Geometric distortions change electronic structure of porphyrins. • Planar non-distorted configuration in porphyrin multilayer. • Conformation depends on molecule–substrate interaction. On-surface metal porphyrins can undergo electronic and conformational changes that play a crucial role in determining the chemical reactivity of the molecular layer. Therefore, accessing those properties is pivotal for their implementation in organic-based devices. Here, by means of photoemission orbital tomography supported by density functional theory calculations, we investigate the electronic and geometrical structure of two metallated tetraphenyl porphyrins (MTPPs), namely ZnTPP and NiTPP, adsorbed on the oxygen-passivated Fe(100)- p (1 × 1)O surface. Both molecules weakly interact with the surface as no charge transfer is observed. In the case of ZnTPP, our data correspond to those of moderately distorted molecules whereas NiTPP exhibits a severe saddle-shape deformation. From additional experiments on NiTPP multilayer films, we conclude that this distortion is a consequence of the interaction with the substrate, as the NiTPP macrocycle of the second layer turns out to be flat. We further find that distortions in the MTPP macrocycle are accompanied by an increasing energy gap between the highest occupied molecular orbitals (HOMO and HOMO-1). Our results demonstrate that photoemission orbital tomography can simultaneously probe the energy level alignment, the azimuthal orientation, and the adsorption geometry of complex aromatic molecules even in the multilayer regime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00201693
Volume :
557
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Inorganica Chimica Acta
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
170412834
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ica.2023.121705