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# Content
1 \documentclass[11pt]{article}
2 \usepackage{endfloat}
3 \usepackage{berkeley}
4 \usepackage{epsf}
5 \usepackage[ref]{overcite}
6 \usepackage{setspace}
7 \usepackage{tabularx}
8 \pagestyle{plain}
9 \pagenumbering{arabic}
10 \oddsidemargin 0.0cm \evensidemargin 0.0cm
11 \topmargin -21pt \headsep 10pt
12 \textheight 9.0in \textwidth 6.5in
13 \brokenpenalty=10000
14 \renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{1.2}
15 \renewcommand\citemid{\ } % no comma in optional reference note
16
17
18 \begin{document}
19
20 \title{A Random Sequential Adsorption model for the differential
21 coverage of Gold (111) surfaces by two related Silicon
22 phthalocyanines}
23
24 \author{Matthew A. Meineke and J. Daniel Gezelter\\
25 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\ University of Notre Dame\\
26 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
27
28 \date{\today}
29 \maketitle
30
31 \begin{abstract}
32 We present a simple model for the discrepancy in the coverage of a
33 Gold (111) surface by two silicon phthalocyanines. The model involves
34 Random Sequential Adsorption (RSA) simulations with two different
35 landing molecules, one of which is tilted relative to the substrate
36 surface and can (under certain conditions) allow neighboring molecules
37 to overlap. This results in a jamming limit that is near full
38 coverage of the surface. The non-overlapping molecules reproduce the
39 half-monolayer jamming limit that is common in continuum RSA models
40 with ellipsoidal landers. Additionally, the overlapping molecules
41 exhibit orientational correlation and orientational domain formation
42 evolving out of a purely random adsorption process.
43 \end{abstract}
44
45 \newpage
46
47 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
48 %%%%%%% BODY OF TEXT
49 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
50
51 \section{Introduction}
52
53 In a recent series of experiments, Li, Lieberman, and Hill found some
54 remarkable differences in the coverage of Gold (111) surfaces by a
55 related set of silicon phthalocyanines.\cite{Li2001} The molecules
56 come in two basic varieties, the ``octopus,'' which has eight thiol
57 groups distributed around the edge of the molecule, and the
58 ``umbrella,'' which has a single thiol group at the end of a central
59 arm. The molecules are roughly the same size, and were expected to
60 yield similar coverage properties when the thiol groups attached to
61 the gold surface. Fig. \ref{fig:lieberman} shows the structures of
62 the two molecules.
63
64 \begin{figure}
65 \begin{center}
66 \epsfxsize=6in
67 \epsfbox{octo-umbrella.eps}
68 \end{center}
69 \caption{Structures of representative umbrella and octopus silicon
70 phthalocyanines.}
71 \label{fig:lieberman}
72 \end{figure}
73
74 Analysis of the coverage properties using ellipsometry, X-ray
75 photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and surface-enhanced Raman scattering
76 (SERS) showed some remarkable behavioral differences. The octopus
77 silicon phthalocyanines formed poorly-organized self-assembled
78 monolayers (SAMs), with a sub-monolayer coverage of the surface. The
79 umbrella molecule, on the other hand, formed well-ordered films
80 approaching a full monolayer of coverage.
81
82 This behavior is surprising for a number of reasons. First, one would
83 expect the eight thiol groups on the octopus to provide additional
84 attachment points for the molecule. Additionally, the eight arms of
85 the octopus should be able to interdigitate and allow for a relatively
86 high degree of interpenetration of the molecules on the surface if
87 only a few of the arms have attached to the surface.
88
89 The question that these experiments raise is: Will a simple
90 statistical model be sufficient to explain the differential coverage
91 of a gold surface by such similar molecules that permanently attach to
92 the surface?
93
94 We have attempted to model this behavior using a simple Random
95 Sequential Adsorption (RSA) approach. In the continuum RSA
96 simulations of disks adsorbing on a plane,\cite{Evans1993} disk-shaped
97 molecules attempt to land on the surface at random locations. If the
98 landing molecule encounters another disk blocking the chosen position,
99 the landing molecule bounces back out into the solution and makes
100 another attempt at a new randomly-chosen location. RSA models have
101 been used to simulate many related chemical situations, from
102 dissociative chemisorption of water on a Fe (100)
103 surface~\cite{Dwyer1977} and the arrangement of proteins on solid
104 surfaces~\cite{Macritche1978,Feder1980,Ramsden1993} to the deposition
105 of colloidal particles on mica surfaces.\cite{Semmler1998} RSA can
106 provide a very powerful model for understanding surface phenomena when
107 the molecules become permanently bound to the surface. There are some
108 RSA models that allow for a window of movement when the molecule first
109 adsorbs.\cite{Dobson1987,Egelhoff1989} However, even in the dynamic
110 approaches to RSA, at some point the molecule becomes a fixed feature
111 of the surface.
112
113 There is an immense literature on the coverage statistics of RSA
114 models with a wide range of landing shapes including
115 squares,\cite{Solomon1986,Bonnier1993} ellipsoids,\cite{Viot1992a} and
116 lines.\cite{Viot1992b} In general, RSA models of surface coverage
117 approach a jamming limit, $\theta_{J}$, which depends on the shape of
118 the landing molecule and the underlying lattice of attachment
119 points.\cite{Evans1993} For disks on a continuum surface (i.e. no
120 underlying lattice), the jamming limit is $\theta_{J} \approx
121 0.547$.\cite{Evans1993} For ellipsoids, rectangles,\cite{Viot1992a}
122 and 2-dimensional spherocylinders,\cite{Ricci1994} there is a small
123 (4\%) initial rise in $\theta_{J}$ as a function of particle
124 anisotropy. However, the jamming limit {\it decreases} with
125 increasing particle anisotropy once the length-to-breadth ratio rises
126 above 2. I.e. ellipsoids landing randomly on a surface will, in
127 general, cover a smaller surface area than disks. Randomly thrown thin
128 lines cover an even smaller area.\cite{Viot1992b}
129
130 How, then, can one explain a near-monolayer coverage by the umbrella
131 molecules? There are really two approaches, one static and one
132 dynamic. In this paper, we present a static RSA model with {\em
133 tilted} disks that allows near-monolayer coverage and which can
134 explain the differences in coverage between the octopus and umbrella.
135 In section \ref{sec:model} we outline the model for the two adsorbing
136 molecules. The computational details of our simulations are given in
137 section \ref{sec:meth}. Section \ref{sec:results} presents the
138 results of our simulations, and section \ref{sec:conclusion} concludes.
139
140 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
141 %% The Model
142 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
143
144 \section{Model}
145 \label{sec:model}
146
147 Two different landers were investigated in this work. The first,
148 representing the octopus phthalocyanine, was modeled as a flat disk of
149 fixed radius ($\sigma = 14 \mbox{\AA}$) with eight equally spaced
150 ``legs'' around the perimeter, each of length $\ell = 5 \mbox{\AA}$.
151 The second type of lander, representing the umbrella phthalocyanine,
152 was modeled by a tilted disk (also of radius $\sigma = 14 \mbox{\AA}$)
153 which was supported by a central handle (also of length $\ell = 5
154 \mbox{\AA}$). The surface normal for the disk of the umbrella,
155 $\hat{n}$ was tilted relative to the handle at an angle $\psi =
156 109.5^{\circ}$. This angle was chosen, as it is the normal
157 tetrahedral bond angle for $sp^{3}$ hybridized carbon atoms, and
158 therefore the likely angle the top makes with the plane. The two
159 particle types are compared in Fig. \ref{fig:landers}, and the
160 coordinates of the tilted umbrella lander are shown in Fig.
161 \ref{fig:t_umbrella}. The angle $\phi$ denotes the angle that the
162 projection of $\hat{n}$ onto the x-y plane makes with the y-axis. In
163 keeping with the RSA approach, each of the umbrella landers is
164 assigned a value of $\phi$ at random as it is dropped onto the
165 surface.
166
167 \begin{figure}
168 \begin{center}
169 \epsfxsize=6in
170 \epsfbox{octopus.eps}
171 \end{center}
172 \caption{Models for the adsorbing species. Both the octopus and
173 umbrella models have circular disks of radius $\sigma$ and are
174 supported away from the surface by arms of length $\ell$. The disk
175 for the umbrella is tilted relative to the plane of the substrate.}
176 \label{fig:landers}
177 \end{figure}
178
179 \begin{figure}
180 \begin{center}
181 \epsfxsize=6in
182 \epsfbox{t_umbrella.eps}
183 \end{center}
184 \caption{Coordinates for the umbrella lander. The vector $\hat{n}$ is
185 normal to the disks. The disks are angled at an angle of $109.5^{\circ}$
186 to the handle, and the projection of $\hat{n}$ onto the substrate
187 surface defines the angle $\phi$.}
188 \label{fig:t_umbrella}
189 \end{figure}
190
191 For each type of lander, we investigated both the continuum
192 (off-lattice) RSA approach as well as a more typical RSA approach
193 utilizing an underlying lattice for the possible attachment points of
194 the thiol groups. In the continuum case, the landers could attach
195 anywhere on the surface. For the lattice-based RSA simulations, an
196 underlying gold hexagonal closed packed (hcp), lattice was employed.
197 The thiols attach at the interstitial locations between three gold
198 atoms on the Au (111) surface,\cite{Li2001} giving a trigonal (i.e.
199 graphitic) underlying lattice for the RSA simulations that is
200 illustrated in Fig. \ref{fig:hcp_lattice}. The hcp nearest neighbor
201 distance was $2.3\mbox{\AA}$, corresponding to gold's lattice spacing.
202 This set the graphitic lattice to have a nearest neighbor distance of
203 $1.33\mbox{\AA}$. Fig. \ref{fig:hcp_lattice} also defines the
204 $\hat{x}$ and $\hat{y}$ directions for the simulation.
205
206 \begin{figure}
207 \begin{center}
208 \epsfxsize=6in
209 \epsfbox{hcp_lattice.eps}
210 \end{center}
211 \caption{The model thiol groups attach at the interstitial sites in
212 the Au (111) surface. These sites are arranged in a graphitic
213 trigonal lattice.}
214 \label{fig:hcp_lattice}
215 \end{figure}
216
217 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
218 %%%% Computational Methods
219 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
220
221 \section{Computational Methodology}
222 \label{sec:meth}
223
224 The simulation box was 4,000 repeated hcp units in both the x and y
225 directions. This gave a rectangular plane ($4600 \mbox{\AA} \times
226 7967 \mbox{\AA}$), to which periodic boundary conditions were
227 applied. Each molecule's attempted landing spot was then chosen
228 randomly. In the continuum simulations, the landing molecule was then
229 checked for overlap with all previously adsorbed molecules. For the
230 octopus molecules, which lie parallel to the surface, the check was a
231 simple distance test. If the center of the landing molecule was at
232 least $2\sigma$ away from the centers of all other molecules, the new
233 molecule was allowed to stay.
234
235 For the umbrella molecule, the test for overlap was slightly more
236 complex. To speed computation, several sequential tests were made.
237 The first test was the simplest, i.e. a check to make sure that the
238 new umbrella's attachment point, or ``handle'', did not lie within the
239 elliptical projection of a previously attached umbrella's top onto the
240 xy-plane. If the lander passed this first test, the disk was tested
241 for intersection with any of the other nearby umbrellas.
242
243 The test for the interection of two neighboring umbrella tops involved
244 three steps. In the first step, the surface normals for the umbrella
245 tops were used to caclulate the parametric line equation that was
246 defined by the intersection of the two planes. This parametric line
247 was then checked for intersection with both of the umbrella tops. If
248 the line did indeed intersect the tops, then the points of
249 intersection along the line were checked to insure sequential
250 intersection of the two tops. ie. The line most enter then leave the
251 first top before it can enter and leave the second top. These series
252 of tests were demanding of computational resources, and were therefore
253 only attempted if the original handle - projection overlap test had
254 been passed.
255
256 Once all of these tests had been passed, the random location and
257 orientation for the molecule were accepted, and the molecule was added
258 to the pool of particles that were permanently attached to the
259 surface.
260
261 For the on-lattice simulations, the initially chosen location on the
262 plane was used to pick an attachment point from the underlying
263 lattice. I.e. if the initial position and orientation placed one of
264 the thiol legs within a small distance ($\epsilon = 0.1 \mbox{\AA}$)
265 of one of the interstitial attachment points, the lander was moved so
266 that the thiol leg was directly over the lattice point before checking
267 for overlap with other landers. If all of the molecule's legs were
268 too far from the attachment points, the molecule bounced back into
269 solution for another attempt.
270
271 To speed up the overlap tests, a modified 2-D neighbor list method was
272 employed. The plane was divided into a $131 \times 131$ grid of
273 equally sized rectangular bins. The overlap test then cycled over all
274 of the molecules within the bins located in a $3 \times 3$ grid
275 centered on the bin in which the test molecule was attempting to land.
276
277 Surface coverage calculations were handled differently between the
278 umbrella molecule simulation, and the octopus model simulation. In
279 the case of the umbrella molecule, the surface coverage was tracked by
280 multiplying the number of succesfully landed particles by the area of
281 its circular top. This number was then divided by the total surfacew
282 area of the plane, to obtain the fractional coverage. In the case of
283 the umbrella molecule, a scanning probe algorithm was used. Here, a
284 $1\mbox{\AA} \times 1\mbox{\AA}$ probe was scanned along the surface,
285 and each point was tested for overlap with the neighboring molecules.
286 At the end of the scan, the total covered area was divided by the
287 total surface area of the plane to determine the fractional coverage.
288
289 Radial and angular correlation functions were computed using standard
290 methods from liquid theory (modified for use on a planar
291 surface).\cite{Hansen86}
292
293 \section{Results}
294 \label{sec:results}
295
296 \subsection{Octopi}
297
298 The jamming limit coverage, $\theta_{J}$, of the off-lattice continuum
299 simulation was found to be 0.5384. This value is within one percent of
300 the jamming limit for circles on a 2D plane.\cite{Evans1993} It is
301 expected that we would approach the accepted jamming limit for a
302 larger gold surface.
303
304 Once the system is constrained by the underlying lattice, $\theta_{J}$
305 drops to 0.5378, showing that the lattice has an almost
306 inconsequential effect on the jamming limit. If the spacing between
307 the interstitial sites were closer to the radius of the landing
308 particles, we would expect a larger effect, but in this case, the
309 jamming limit is nearly unchanged from the continuum simulation.
310
311 The radial distribution function, $g(r)$, for the continuum and
312 lattice simulations are shown in the two left panels in
313 Fig. \ref{fig:octgofr}. It is clear that the lattice has no
314 significant contribution to the distribution other than slightly
315 raising the peak heights. $g(r)$ for the octopus molecule is not
316 affected strongly by the underlying lattice because each molecule can
317 attach with any of it's eight legs. Additionally, the molecule can be
318 randomly oriented around each attachment point. The effect of the
319 lattice on the distribution of molecular centers is therefore
320 inconsequential.
321
322 The features of both radial distribution functions are quite
323 simple. An initial peak at twice the radius of the octopi
324 corresponding to the first shell being the closest two circles can
325 approach without overlapping each other. The second peak at four times
326 the radius is simply a second ``packing'' shell. These features agree
327 almost perfectly with the Percus-Yevick-like expressions for $g(r)$
328 for a two dimensional RSA model that were derived by Boyer {\em et
329 al.}\cite{Boyer1995}
330
331 \begin{figure}
332 \begin{center}
333 \epsfxsize=6in
334 \epsfbox{gofr.eps}
335 \end{center}
336 \caption{$g(r)$ for both the octopus and umbrella molecules in the
337 continuum (upper) and on-lattice (lower) simulations.}
338 \label{fig:octgofr}
339 \end{figure}
340
341 \subsection{Umbrellas}
342
343 In the case of the umbrellas, the jamming limit for the continuum
344 simulation was $0.920$ and for the simulation on the lattice,
345 $\theta_{J} = 0.915$ . Once again, the lattice has an almost
346 inconsequential effect on the jamming limit. The overlap allowed by
347 the umbrellas allows for almost total surface coverage based on random
348 parking alone. This then is the primary result of this work: the
349 observation of a jamming limit or coverage near unity for molecules
350 that can (under certain conditions) allow neighboring molecules to
351 overlap.
352
353 The underlying lattice has a strong effect on $g(r)$ for the
354 umbrellas. The umbrellas do not have the eight legs and orientational
355 freedom around each leg available to the octopi. The effect of the
356 lattice on the distribution of molecular centers is therefore quite
357 pronounced, as can be seen in Fig. \ref{fig:octgofr}. Since the total
358 number of particles is similar to the continuum simulation, the
359 apparent noise in $g(r)$ for the on-lattice umbrellas is actually an
360 artifact of the underlying lattice.
361
362 Because a molecule's success in sticking is closely linked to its
363 orientation, the radial distribution function and the angular
364 distribution function show some very interesting features
365 (Fig. \ref{fig:tugofr}). The initial peak is located at approximately
366 one radius of the umbrella. This corresponds to the closest distance
367 that a perfectly aligned landing molecule may approach without
368 overlapping. The angular distribution confirms this, showing a
369 maximum angular correlation at $r = \sigma$. The location of the
370 second peak in the radial distribution corresponds to twice the radius
371 of the umbrella. This peak is accompanied by a dip in the angular
372 distribution. The angular depletion can be explained easily since
373 once the particles are greater than $2 \sigma$ apart, the landing
374 molecule can take on any orientation and land successfully. The
375 recovery of the angular correlation at slightly larger distances is
376 due to second-order correlations with intermediate particles. The
377 alignments associated with all three regions are illustrated in
378 Fig. \ref{fig:peaks}.
379
380 \begin{figure}
381 \begin{center}
382 \epsfxsize=6in
383 \epsfbox{angular.eps}
384 \end{center}
385 \caption{$g(r)$ and the distance-dependent $\langle cos \phi_{ij}
386 \rangle$ for the umbrella thiol in the off-lattice (left side) and
387 on-lattice simulations.}
388 \label{fig:tugofr}
389 \end{figure}
390
391 \begin{figure}
392 \begin{center}
393 \epsfxsize=6in
394 \epsfbox{peaks.eps}
395 \end{center}
396 \caption{The position of the first peak in $\langle cos \phi_{ij}
397 \rangle$ is due to the forced alignment of two tightly-packed
398 umbrellas. The depletion zone at 2$\sigma$ is due to the availability
399 of all alignments at this separation. Recovery of the angular
400 correlation at longer distances is due to second-order correlations.}
401 \label{fig:peaks}
402 \end{figure}
403
404 \subsection{Comparison with Experiment}
405
406 Considering the lack of atomistic detail in this model, the coverage
407 statistics are in relatively good agreement with those observed by Li
408 {\it et al.}\cite{Li2001} Their experiments directly measure the ratio
409 of Sulfur atoms to Gold surface atoms. In this way, they are able to
410 estimate the average area taken up by each adsorbed molecule. Rather
411 than relying on area estimates, we have computed the S:Au ratio for
412 both types of molecule from our simulations. The ratios are given in
413 Table \ref{tab:coverage}.
414
415 \begin{table}
416 \caption{Ratio of Monolayer Sulfur atoms to Gold surface atoms}
417 \label{tab:coverage}
418 \begin{center}
419 \begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|}
420 \hline
421 & umbrella & octopus \\ \hline
422 Li {\it et al.}\cite{Li2001} & 0.021 & 0.0065 \\ \hline
423 continuum & 0.0320 & 0.0107 \\ \hline
424 on-lattice & 0.0320 & 0.0105 \\ \hline
425 \end{tabular}
426 \end{center}
427 \end{table}
428
429 Our simulations give S:Au ratios that are 52\% higher than the
430 experiments for the umbrella and 63\% higher than the experiments for
431 the octopi. There are a number of explanations for this discrepancy.
432 The simplest explanation is that the disks we are using to model these
433 molecules are too small. Another factor leading to the discrepancy is
434 the lack of thickness for both the disks and the supporting legs.
435 Thicker disks would force the umbrellas to be farther apart, and
436 thicker supporting legs would effectively increase the radius of the
437 octopus molecules.
438
439 However, this model does effectively capture the discrepancy in
440 coverage surface between the two related landing molecules. We are in
441 remarkable agreement with the coverage statistics given the simplicity
442 of the model.
443
444 \section{Conclusions}
445 \label{sec:conclusion}
446
447 The primary result of this work is the observation of near-monolayer
448 coverage in a simple RSA model with molecules that can partially
449 overlap. This is sufficient to explain the experimentally-observed
450 coverage differences between the octopus and umbrella molecules.
451 Using ellipsometry, Li {\it et al.} have observed that the octopus
452 molecules are {\it not} parallel to the substrate, and that they are
453 attached to the surface with only four legs on average.\cite{Li2001}
454 As long as the remaining thiol arms that are not bound to the surface
455 can provide steric hindrance to molecules that attempt to slide
456 underneath the disk, the results will be largely unchanged. The
457 projection of a tilted disk onto the surface is a simple ellipsoid, so
458 a RSA model using tilted disks that {\em exclude the volume underneath
459 the disks} will revert to a standard RSA model with ellipsoidal
460 landers. Viot {\it et al.} have shown that for ellipsoids, the
461 maximal jamming limit is only $\theta_{J} = 0.58$.\cite{Viot1992a}
462 Therefore, the important feature that leads to near-monolayer coverage
463 is the ability of the landers to overlap.
464
465 The other important result of this work is the observation of an
466 angular correlation between the molecules that extends to fairly large
467 distances. Although not unexpected, the correlation extends well past
468 the first ``shell'' of molecules. Farther than the first shell, there
469 is no direct interaction between an adsorbed molecule and a molecule
470 that is landing, although once the surface has started to approach the
471 jamming limit, the only available landing spots will require landing
472 molecules to adopt an orientation similar to one of the adsorbed
473 molecules. Therefore, given an entirely random adsorption process, we
474 would still expect to observe orientational ``domains'' developing in
475 the monolayer. We have shown a relatively small piece of the
476 monolayer in Fig. \ref{fig:bent_u}, using color to denote the
477 orientation of each molecule. Indeed, the monolayer does show
478 orientational domains that are surprisingly large.
479
480 \begin{figure}
481 \begin{center}
482 \epsfxsize=6in
483 \epsfbox{bent_u.eps}
484 \end{center}
485 \caption{A bird's-eye view of the orientational domains in a monolayer
486 of the umbrella thiol. Similarly oriented particles are shaded the
487 same color.}
488 \label{fig:bent_u}
489 \end{figure}
490
491 The important physics that has been left out of this simple RSA model
492 is the relaxation and dynamics of the monolayer. We would expect that
493 allowing the adsorbed molecules to rotate on the surface would result
494 in a monolayer with much longer range orientational order and a nearly
495 complete coverage of the underlying surface. It should be relatively
496 simple to add orientational relaxation using standard Monte Carlo
497 methodology~\cite{Ricci1994,Frenkel1996} to investigate what effect
498 this has on the properties of the monolayer.
499
500 \section{Acknowledgments}
501 The authors would like to thank Marya Lieberman for helpful
502 discussions. This work has been supported in part by a New Faculty
503 Award from the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation.
504
505 \pagebreak
506
507 \bibliographystyle{achemso}
508 \bibliography{RSA}
509
510 \end{document}