Adsorption and two-dimensional phases of a large polar molecule: Sub-phthalocyanine on Ag(111)

Abstract
The adsorption and the two-dimensional (2D) ordering of chloro[subphthalocyaninato]boron(III) (SubPc) on Ag(111) has been studied in detail by combined scanning tunneling microscopy and photoelectron spectroscopy at room temperature. SubPc is a polar, highly symmetric molecule, consisting of an extended aromatic system and a central B-Cl bond. When growing on Ag(111) an interesting phase behavior is observed for the first molecular layer of SubPc. At low coverage, below 0.2 monolayer (ML), a 2D lattice gas is present, whereas at medium coverage (on the order of 0.2–0.5 ML), 2D condensed molecular islands are observed in coexistence with the 2D lattice gas. In these condensed islands, the molecules assemble into a well-ordered honeycomb pattern. At higher coverage (approximately 0.5–0.9 ML) the molecules organize into a 2D hexagonal close-packed (hcp) pattern, in equilibrium with a dense 2D gas phase. In the honeycomb and in the hcp pattern, individual molecules are imaged with submolecular resolution, giving information on their orientation. For both the honeycomb and hcp patterns, islands with two different orientations of the superstructures with respect to the Ag(111) substrate are observed. In case of the honeycomb pattern, the two superstructures are enantiomorphic. The chirality of these layers originates in the loss of the symmetry of the metal surface upon adsorption of SubPc, while the molecules alone are intrinsically achiral. Based on different photoelectron spectroscopy experiments we conclude that the SubPc molecule is adsorbed on Ag(111) with its Cl atom towards the substrate and that the molecule remains intact. Finally, several aspects of the observed 2D condensed phases and the thermodynamic phase behavior are discussed with respect to the charge distribution and the adsorption physics and chemistry of the SubPc molecules.