posted on 2014-06-04, 00:00authored byJ. Nathan Hohman, John C. Thomas, Yuxi Zhao, Harsharn Auluck, Moonhee Kim, Wouter Vijselaar, Sander Kommeren, Andreas Terfort, Paul S. Weiss
When alkanethiolate self-assembled
monolayers on Au{111} are exchanged
with alkaneselenols from solution, replacement of thiolates by selenols
is rapid and complete, and is well described by perimeter-dependent
island growth kinetics. The monolayer structures change as selenolate
coverage increases, from being epitaxial and consistent with the initial
thiolate structure to being characteristic of selenolate monolayer
structures. At room temperature and at positive sample bias in scanning
tunneling microscopy, the selenolate–gold attachment is labile,
and molecules exchange positions with neighboring thiolates. The scanning
tunneling microscope probe can be used to induce these place-exchange
reactions.