Reversible Intercalation of Organic Solvents in Graphite and Its Hindrance by a Strongly Adsorbing Supramolecular Monolayer

Author:

Badami‐Behjat Arash12,Rinkovec Tamara3ORCID,Procházka Pavel4,Bazylevska Anastasiia3ORCID,RodríguezGonzález Miriam C.5ORCID,Cao Hai6,Čechal Jan4,De Feyter Steven3,Lackinger Markus12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Deutsches Museum Museumsinsel 1 80538 Munich Germany

2. TUM School of Natural Sciences Physics Department Technical University of Munich James Franck Strasse 1 85748 Garching Germany

3. Department of Chemistry Division of Molecular Imaging and Photonics KU Leuven Leuven 24062 Belgium

4. CEITEC−Central European Institute of Technology Brno University of Technology Purkyňova 123 Brno 61200 Czech Republic

5. Área de Química Física Departamento de Química Instituto de Materiales y Nanotecnología (IMN) Universidad de La Laguna (ULL) La Laguna 38200 Spain

6. State Key Laboratory of Materials‐Oriented Chemical Engineering College of Chemical Engineering Nanjing Tech University Nanjing 211816 China

Abstract

AbstractAt elevated temperatures, the prototypical organic solvents used to study the self‐assembly of supramolecular monolayers at liquid–solid interfaces alter a graphite substrate by intercalation. As a consequence, less strongly bound supramolecular monolayers become thermodynamically unstable, as probed by scanning tunneling microscopy. Complementary characterization by atomic force microscopy, confocal Raman spectroscopy and low energy electron microscopy consistently points to subsurface changes in the top few layers of the graphite substrate due to solvent intercalation. High‐temperature annealing at 900 °C in the vacuum restores the adsorption properties of the graphite substrates, indicating a high activation energy for deintercalation. However, strongly adsorbing hydrogen‐bonded monolayers of trimesic acid inhibit solvent intercalation and thus protect the graphite substrate. Mildly solvent‐intercalated graphite may prove useful as an easily prepared graphitic material with further weakened adsorption properties.

Funder

Bayerische Forschungsstiftung

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

Wiley

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