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Examples of molecular self-assembly at surfaces

Published 5 Dec 2014 in cond-mat.stat-mech and cond-mat.soft | (1412.2097v1)

Abstract: The self-assembly of molecules at surfaces can be caused by a range of physical mechanisms. Assembly can be driven by intermolecular forces, or molecule-surface forces, or both; it can result in structures that are in equilibrium or that are kinetically trapped. Here we review examples of self-assembly at surfaces that have been studied within the User program of the Molecular Foundry at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, focusing on a physical understanding of what causes patterns seen in experiment. Some apparently disparate systems can be described in similar physical terms, indicating that simple factors -- such as the geometry and energy scale of intermolecular binding -- are key to understanding the self-assembly of those systems.

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