Light: Advanced Manufacturing (Nov 2022)

Tip-induced bond weakening, tilting, and hopping of a single CO molecule on Cu(100)

  • Xiaoru Dong,
  • Ben Yang,
  • Rui Zhu,
  • Ruipu Wang,
  • Yang Zhang,
  • Yao Zhang,
  • Zhenchao Dong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.37188/lam.2022.052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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The interaction between a probing tip and an adsorbed molecule can significantly impact the molecular chemical structure and even induce its motion on the surface. In this study, the tip-induced bond weakening, tilting, and hopping processes of a single molecule were investigated by sub-nanometre resolved tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS). We used single carbon monoxide (CO) molecules adsorbed on the Cu (100) surface as a model system for the investigation. The vibrational frequency of the C−O stretching mode is always redshifted as the tip approaches, revealing the weakening of the C−O bond owing to tip−molecule interactions. Further analyses of both the vibrational Stark effect and TERS imaging patterns suggest a delicate tilting phenomenon of the adsorbed CO molecule on Cu(100), which eventually leads to lateral hopping of the molecule. While a tilting orientation is found toward the hollow site along the [110] direction of the Cu(100) surface, the hopping event is more likely to proceed via the bridge site to the nearest Cu neighbour along the [100] or [010] direction. Our results provide deep insights into the microscopic mechanisms of tip−molecule interactions and tip-induced molecular motions on surfaces at the single-bond level.

Keywords