Molecular Assembly on Two-Dimensional Materials
Avijit Kumar, Kaustuv Banerjee, Peter Liljeroth

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in molecular self-assembly on two-dimensional materials, focusing on electronic properties, assembly mechanisms, and potential applications in electronics and sensing.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of how molecular self-assembly on 2D materials influences electronic properties and enables new functionalities for device applications.
Findings
Moire patterns enable site-selective assembly and gating.
2D materials decouple molecules electronically, allowing high-resolution studies.
Self-assembled molecules modify electronic properties of graphene.
Abstract
Molecular self-assembly is a well-known technique to create highly functional nanostructures on surfaces. Self-assembly on two-dimensional materials is a developing field and has already resulted in the discovery of several rich and interesting phenomena. Here, we review this progress with an emphasis on the electronic properties of the adsorbates and the substrate in well-defined systems, as unveiled by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). We cover three aspects of the self-assembly. The first one focuses on non-covalent self-assembly dealing with site-selectivity due to inherent moire pattern present on 2D materials deposited on substrates. Modification of intermolecular interactions and molecule-substrate interactions influences the assembly drastically and 2D materials can also be used as a platform to carry out covalent and metal-coordinated assembly. The second part deals with the…
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