Molecular order at the surface of an organic monolayer studied by low energy helium diffraction

Abstract
We demonstrate that the surface structure of organic monolayers can be determined by low energy helium diffraction at low surface temperatures. This uniquely surface-sensitive and nondestructive technique shows that the CH3-terminated surface of a monolayer of docosane thiol (CH3(CH2)21SH) on Au(111) is composed of small, ordered domains (lattice constant 5.01±0.02 Å), a large fraction of which share a common orientation. The helium diffraction intensities decrease monotonically with increasing temperature and vanish around 100 K, due to thermal motion of the CH3 groups. Surface order is observed for chains as short as ten carbons (CH3(CH2)9SH) but a shorter chain, (CH3(CH2)5SH), gave no diffraction.