Abstract
Molecules adsorbing on metal surfaces form a variety of different surface polymorphs. How strongly this polymorphism affects interface properties is a priori unknown. In this work we investigate how strongly the surface polymorphism influences the interface work functions for various organic/metal interfaces. To evaluate the whole bandwidth of possible polymorphs, we perform full theoretical structure search, probing millions of polymorph candidates. All of these candidates might be observed in reality, either by kinetic trapping or by thermodynamic occupation. Employing first-principles calculations and machine learning we predict and analyze the work function changes for those millions of candidates for three physically distinct model systems: the weakly interacting naphthalene on Cu(111), the strongly interacting anthraquinone on Ag(111), and tetracyanoethylene, which undergoes a reorientation from lying to standing polymorphs on the Cu(111) surface. These thorough investigations indicate that kinetic trapping of flat-lying molecules can lead to work function differences of a few hundred meV. If the molecules also reorientate, this can increase to a change of several eV. We further show that the spread in work function decreases when working in thermodynamic equilibrium, but thermally occupied phases still lead to an intrinsic uncertainty at elevated temperatures.
Highlights
As basis for our machine learning approach, we use the adsorption energies and adsorption induced work-function modifications of several hundred polymorph candidates for each of the three interfaces (251 for naphthalene/Cu, 245 for A2O/Ag, 319 for TCNE/Cu)
In this work we investigate how strongly the surface polymorphism influences the interface work functions for various metal/organic interfaces
We further show that the spread in work function decreases when working in thermodynamic equilibrium, but thermally occupied phases still lead to an intrinsic uncertainty at elevated temperatures
Summary
Supporting Information The Supporting Information contains results for the two acenequinones not shown in the main manuscript, details of the prediction process for the polymorph properties, alternative visualizations of the interplay between work function, adsorption energy and temperature as well as charge transfer considerations for the different interface systems and details of the thermal occupation estimation.
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