Here we present a protocol for the fabrication of C60/graphene hybrid nanostructures by physical thermal evaporation. Particularly, the proper manipulation of deposition and annealing conditions allow the control over the creation of 1D and quasi 1D C60 structures on rippled graphene.
Physical thermal deposition in a high vacuum environment is a clean and controllable method for fabricating novel molecular nanostructures on graphene. We present methods for depositing and passively manipulating C60 molecules on rippled graphene that advance the pursuit of realizing applications involving 1D C60/graphene hybrid structures. The techniques applied in this exposition are geared towards high vacuum systems with preparation areas capable of supporting molecular deposition as well as thermal annealing of the samples. We focus on C60 deposition at low pressure using a homemade Knudsen cell connected to a scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) system. The number of molecules deposited is regulated by controlling the temperature of the Knudsen cell and the deposition time. One-dimensional (1D) C60 chain structures with widths of two to three molecules can be prepared via tuning of the experimental conditions. The surface mobility of the C60 molecules increases with annealing temperature allowing them to move within the periodic potential of the rippled graphene. Using this mechanism, it is possible to control the transition of 1D C60 chain structures to a hexagonal close packed quasi-1D stripe structure.
This protocol explains how to deposit and manipulate C60 molecules on graphene such that 1D and quasi-1D C60 chain structures can be realized. The techniques in this experiment were developed to address the need to guide adsorbates into desirable configurations without having to rely on manual manipulation, which is slow and can require great effort. The procedures described here rely on the use of a high vacuum system with a sample preparation area capable of supporting molecular deposition and thermal annealing of the samples. STM is used to characterize the samples, but other molecular resolution techniques may be applied.
The thermal evaporation of molecules within a Knudsen cell is an efficient and clean way to prepare thin films. In this protocol, a Knudsen cell is used to evaporate C60 molecules onto a graphene substrate. This Knudsen cell evaporator mainly consists of a quartz tube, a heating filament, thermocouple wires, and feedthroughs1,2,3. The quartz tube is used to accommodate the molecules, the tungsten filament heats the molecules in the quartz tube through applied current, and the thermocouple wires are used to measure the temperature. In the experiments, the deposition rate is controlled by tuning the temperature source in the Knudsen cell. The thermocouple wires are attached to the outside wall of the quartz tube and therefore typically measure a temperature of the outside wall that is slightly different from the temperature inside of the cell where the molecular source is located. To obtain the exact temperature in the quartz tube, we performed calibration using two thermocouple setups to measure temperatures inside and outside the tube and recorded the temperature difference. In this way, we can more precisely control the temperature of the source during the molecular evaporation experiments using thermocouple wires attached to the outside of the quartz tube. Because a small amount of the sublimated molecules will be in a gaseous phase at a lower pressure, when the molecules are evaporated, there is usually an associated pressure change. Therefore, we monitor the change of the pressure in the load lock carefully.
This evaporator can be used to deposit various molecule sources such as C60, C70, boron subphthalocyanine chloride, Ga, Al, and Hg4,5,6,7,8. Compared with other thin film preparation techniques, for instance, spin casting9,10,11, the thermal evaporation in high vacuum is much cleaner and versatile since there is no solvent required for the deposition. Furthermore, the degassing process before deposition improves the purity of the source, eliminating possible impurities.
1. Preparation of the Homemade Knudsen Cell
2. Prepare the C60 Source in the Homemade Knudsen Cell
3. Prepare Atomically Clean Graphene in the UHV Chamber
4. Deposit the C 60 onto Graphene Substrate Using the Homemade Knudsen Cell in Load Lock
5. Prepare the C 60 /Graphene Sample to be Measured in STM Main Chamber
Following evaporation, the graphene with the newly deposited C60 is annealed at 150 °C for 2 h. The large-scale STM image in Figure 2a shows a characteristic quasi-1D C60 chain structure found after this initial annealing process. A closer inspection in Figure 2b reveals detailed information of this 1D structure, in which each bright spherical protrusion represents one single C60 molecule. Typically, the 1D chains occur as bimolecular and trimolecular C60 chains with an average C60-C60 distance of 1.00 ± 0.01 nm, indicating that the C60 molecules arrange in a hexagonal close packed manner. The line profile in Figure 2c corresponding to the dashed green line in Figure 2b shows clear separation between the C60 chains where the second and the third peaks in the profile are nearest neighbor molecules on adjacent chains. According to observations, the chains exist exclusively as bimolecular or trimolecular rows with the bimolecular chains occurring twice as frequently as the trimolecular chains. As observed in the high-resolution STM images, the chains are well arranged in either a 3-2-2 or 2-3-2 manner. There may occur some junctions within one chain where a trimolecular segment can jump to a bimolecular arrangement, or vice versa.
The growth of the quasi-1D C60 chains is induced by the underneath graphene substrate. The high-resolution STM image of the atomically clean graphene substrate (Figure 1c) shows a rippled structure. This well-defined linear periodic modulation causes C60 molecules to form the quasi-1D chains. The sample is subsequently annealed at 210 °C for 2 h in order to investigate thermal influences on the C60/graphene 1D nanostructures. Annealing at a higher temperature increases the surface mobility of the C60 molecules, allowing them to self-assemble into a more compact, hexagonal close packed quasi-1D stripe structure, as shown in Figure 3a. These structures orient along the same direction as the C60 chains and are observed with widths varying between 3 and 8 molecules per stripe, as shown in Figure 3b. The most common stripes have a width of six C60 rows, occurring 45% of the time, while 5-row stripes are the second most likely stripe structure. In this structure, there is no space separating neighboring stripes. An obvious difference from the gently annealed C60 chain structure is that the stripes are not formed on a single flat terrace, but on staggered narrow terraces, shown as nearly straight and parallel step edges (Figure 3b, c). The two rows at the boundary of each step edge, one on the upper terrace and one on the lower terrace, assume a denser arrangement relative to one another, having only a lateral inter-row spacing of 0.75 ± 0.01 nm. This arrangement presumably accommodates the underlying terraces that formed after the higher temperature annealing. On the terrace planes, the C60 molecules still maintain a close-packed pattern with the same intermolecular spacing characteristic of C60-C60. The C60 row near the step edge on the upper terrace appears to be around 0.5 Å higher than the other C60 rows on the same terrace; this is likely due to different local electronic environments as shown in Figure 3b, c. Similar to the previous chain structure, there are junctions for neighboring stripes. To compare these two different structures more systematically, we use 3D models to illustrate them. Figure 4a, c is the top and side view of the schematic model for the C60 chains, respectively, with C60 molecules (dark green spheres) and honeycomb structure of graphene substrate (small blue spheres). Here, the unit of the chain structure is defined to be a bimolecular cell (chain plus one interchain spacing) plus an adjacent trimolecular cell. The 3D model clearly shows the size of one unit as 5.08 ± 0.02 nm. The larger gap spacing (1.23 nm) between adjacent chains is labeled in Figure 4a, c. Figure 4b,d shows the 3D schematic model of the 6-row stripe structure. The narrower inter-row spacing between two adjacent C60 stripes is 0.75 nm as labeled in Figure 4b, which is smaller than the typical hexagonal close packed structure. These typical 6-row stripes have a lateral periodicity of 5.08 ± 0.02 nm, almost exactly equal to the lateral spacing of the unit size of the chain structure12.
Figure 1. Homemade Knudsen cell and atomically resolved STM image of graphene substrate. (a) The homemade Knudsen cell with the copper shell. (b) The detailed structure of the homemade Knudsen cell showing the main components inside the copper shell. 1 is CF flange, 2 is thermocouple wire, 3 is W heating filament, 4 is glass tube, 5 is ceramic piece, 6 is hollow copper rods (A, B, C, D), 7 is supporting rods, 8 is feedthrough. (c) Atomically resolved STM topographic image of a clean graphene surface12. Figure 1c has been modified from12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. STM images of C60 chains after annealing at 150 °C. (a) C60 forms well-ordered 1D chains on graphene over scales much larger than an individual chain (Vs = 2.255 V, I = 0.300 nA). (b) Molecular resolution STM image of C60 nanostructures showing the occurrence of only bimolecular or trimolecular chains. Intermolecular spacing within a chain is 1.0 nm while the distance between the centers of adjacent C60 rows belonging to neighboring chains is 1.23 nm, which is much larger than the inter-row distance of 0.87 nm in the close packed C60 structure (I = 0.500 nA, Vs = 1.950 V). (c) A line profile showing the intermolecular distance and gap between adjacent chains along the dashed green line in (b)12. This figure has been modified from12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Self-assembled quasi-hexagonal close packed 1D C60 stripe structure on graphene after raising the annealing temperature to 210 °C. (a) STM image showing quasi-hexagonal close packed C60 1D stripes oriented along the same axis (I = 0.200 nA, Vs = 2.200 V). (b) High-resolution STM image of C60 1D stripes (I = 0.200 nA, Vs = 2.400 V). (c) A line profile showing the hexagonal close packed C60 1D stripes on two terraces along the dashed green line in (b)12. This figure has been modified from12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Schematic models. Schematic models for both C60 chains and stripes depicting the graphene as the smaller, underlying blue spheres and the C60 molecules as the dark green, space-filling spheres. (a, c) Top and side views of bimolecular and trimolecular C60 chains on graphene. (b, d) Top and side views of the typical C60 stripe with 6-row width12. This figure has been modified from12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
The techniques described in this protocol are designed for thermal deposition of organic materials and other high vapor pressure materials. These techniques can be integrated with ultra-high vacuum systems that have sample preparation areas capable of supporting molecular evaporation as well as thermal annealing. The aim for this specific experiment is to deposit C60 molecules on graphene substrate and study the self-assembly of C60 and the thermal effect.
The benefit of the method is that it provides a super clean sample when compared with other thin film preparation methods, like spin coating. Compared with more complex technologies like chemical vapor deposition (CVD), this physical thermal evaporation is much easier to realize and fit for stable atoms and molecules deposition. Atomic and molecular resolution imaging are required to observe the C60/graphene hybrid nanostructures. STM is used in this exposition. It is critical to maintain the purity of the substrate and C60 source throughout deposition by degassing and annealing ahead of time and maintaining a high vacuum throughout the process. Proper post-deposition annealing is crucial to obtain the 1D and quasi-1D nanostructures, as this technique exploits the variable nature of C60 surface mobility under various thermal conditions.
STM measurement demonstrates that the C60/graphene sample synthesized by the physical thermal deposition method is atomically clean. The space in the load lock is designed to be very limited to achieve an ultra-high vacuum in a rather short time. The molecule deposition needs to be completed in such a small space that a homemade Knudsen cell becomes necessary. The homemade Knudsen cell evaporator is mounted in the load lock chamber and can be baked separately, which is also helpful for changing the molecules or refilling the evaporator12. The highest deposition temperature for this homemade Knudsen cell is 450 °C, as determined by the CF Flanged Power Feedthrough. It is critical to degas the C60 source in the homemade Knudsen cell at 300 °C to guarantee the purity of C60 when deposited at 270 °C. It is also very important to anneal the graphene substrate just before the molecule deposition so that it is at its cleanest state at the beginning of the deposition. A binary system can also be achieved by adding one more homemade Knudsen cell evaporator on the opposite side of the first one.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work is supported by the U.S. Army Research Office under the grant W911NF-15-1-0414.
CF Flanged power feedthrough | Kurt J. Lesker | EFT0042033 | |
Copper sheets | Alfa Aesar | 7440-50-8 | |
Thermocouple chromel/alumel wires | Omega Engineering | ST032034/ST080042 | |
Tungsten wires | Alfa Aesar | 7440-33-7 | |
Stainless steel rods | McMaster-Carr | 95412A868 | |
Copper wires | McMaster-Carr | 8873K28 | |
Hollow copper rods | McMaster-Carr | 7190K52 | |
C60 | MER Corporation | MR6LP |