The Role of Phase Stabilization and Surface Orientation in 4,4'-Biphenyl-Dicarboxylic Acid Self-Assembly and Transformation on Silver Substrates
Anton O. Makoveev, Pavel Proch\'azka, Matthias Blatnik, Luk\'a\v{s}, Kormo\v{s}, Tom\'a\v{s} Sk\'ala, and Jan \v{C}echal

TL;DR
This study investigates how surface orientation affects the self-assembly and phase transformation of 4,4'-biphenyl-dicarboxylic acid on silver substrates, providing insights for molecular functionalization strategies.
Contribution
It offers a multiscale analysis of molecular self-assembly on different silver surface orientations, highlighting the role of phase stabilization and transformation mechanisms.
Findings
Structural motifs are similar on Ag(111) and Ag(100) surfaces.
Intermediate phases differ in structure and composition.
Real-time analysis reveals phase stabilization and burst transformations.
Abstract
Molecular functionalization of nanoparticles and metallic substrates can be used to tune their properties for specific applications. However, polycrystalline substrates and nanoparticles exhibit surface planes with distinct crystallographic orientations. Therefore, the development of reliable strategies for molecular functionalization requires knowledge of the role of the surface plane orientation in the growth kinetics, structure, and properties of the molecular layer. Here, we apply a multiscale analysis to investigate the self-assembly of 4,4'-biphenyl-dicarboxylic acid (BDA) on Ag(111) and critically discuss the difference to Ag(100). Whereas the structural motifs for intact and fully deprotonated BDA are similar on both surfaces, the intermediate phases comprising partially deprotonated BDA differ in the structure and chemical composition. A real-time view of the phase…
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