The prototypical organic-oxide interface: intra-molecular resolution of sexiphenyl on In$_2$O$_3$(111)
Margareta Wagner, Jakob Hofinger, Martin Setv\'in, Lynn A. Boatner,, Michael Schmid, and Ulrike Diebold

TL;DR
This study investigates the atomic-scale structure and orientation of para-sexiphenyl molecules on In$_2$O$_3$(111) surfaces, revealing how they form ordered monolayers crucial for organic electronic interfaces.
Contribution
It provides the first atomic-resolution characterization of 6P molecules on In$_2$O$_3$(111), elucidating their adsorption geometry and monolayer formation process.
Findings
Molecules orient along high-symmetry surface directions after annealing.
Initial loose network transitions into a densely packed ordered monolayer.
The monolayer exhibits a (2×1) structure with specific molecular density.
Abstract
The performance of an organic-semiconductor device is critically determined by the geometric alignment, orientation, and ordering of the organic molecules. While an organic multilayer eventually adopts the crystal structure of the organic material, the alignment and configuration at the interface with the substrate/electrode material is essential for charge injection into the organic layer. This work focuses on the prototypical organic semiconductor para-sexiphenyl (6P) adsorbed on InO(111), the thermodynamically most stable surface of the material that the most common transparent conducting oxide, indium tin oxide (ITO) is based on. The onset of nucleation and formation of the first monolayer are followed with atomically-resolved scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and non-contact atomic force microscopy (nc-AFM). Annealing to 200C provides sufficient thermal energy for…
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