Low-dimensional benzotriazole-copper assemblies
A combination of several surface sensitive techniques (NEXAFS, XPS, HREELS and STM) and DFT modelling allowed investigating the interaction of Cu atoms (supported on a less reactive Au(111) surface) with benzotriazole (C6H5N3) which is known to enhance the corrosion resistance of copper.
F. Grillo et al., Nanoscale 11, 13017 (2019).
For some time benzotriazole (BTAH, C6H5N3) has been known to enhance the corrosion resistance of copper at the monolayer level, although the exact mechanism is still a matter of discussion and disagreement in the literature. In general, the corrosion inhibition action is related to BTAH strongly chemisorbing on copper. On less reactive surfaces such as Au(111), BTAH weakly physisorbs instead. To gain a better understanding of the chemistry of benzotriazole and its binding with copper, BTAH was dosed on copper-doped Au(111) surfaces and investigated through complementary surface sensitive techniques (NEXAFS, photoemission, HREELS, and STM) and supported by DFT modelling (StoBe). |
metal organic compound further coordinated with copper atoms on or in the gold surface top layers. Oligomers based on a Cu:BTA 1:2 stoichiometric ratio are also seen. On annealing such oligomers evolve into longer polymers, with a stoichiometric ratio moving in favour of 1:1. Heating treatments result also in diffusion of the unreacted copper into the bulk gold. On-surface condensation of low-dimensional benzotriazole – copper assemblies; Federico Grillo, David Batchelor, Christian R. Larrea, Stephen M. Francis, Paolo Lacovig, and Neville V. Richardson; Nanoscale 11, 13017-13031 (2019). 10.1039/C9NR04152D |