posted on 2014-06-11, 00:00authored byBruno Schuler, Shi-Xia Liu, Yan Geng, Silvio Decurtins, Gerhard Meyer, Leo Gross
We report the contrast formation
in the local contact potential
difference (LCPD) measured by Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM)
on single charge-transfer complexes (CTCs) on a NaCl bilayer on Cu(111).
At different tip heights, we found quantitatively different LCPD contrasts
that characterize different properties of the molecule. In the small
distance regime, the tip penetrates the electron density of the molecule,
and the contrast is related to the size and topography of the electron
shell of the molecule. For larger distances, the LCPD contrast corresponds
to the electrostatic field above the molecule. However, in the medium-distance
regime, that is, for tip heights similar to the size of the molecule,
the nonspherical distribution of π- and σ-electrons often
conceals the effect of the partial charges within the molecule. Only
for large distances does the LCPD map converge toward the simple field
of a dipole for a polar molecule.