Abstract
Neutron scattering experiments have been carried out on low-coverage films of the aromatic p-phenylene oligomer molecules ( p-nP, C 6 n H 10 + 4( n − 2), where n indicates the number of phenyl units per molecule) physisorbed onto the surface of graphite. The molecular arrangement within these films has been determined as a function of temperature, number of molecular layers, and molecular length. Analysis of the diffraction data reveals two-dimensional film structures consistent for molecules having their long-axis parallel to the underlying substrate. The experimental measurements provide evidence for a melting transition in a monolayer film and thermal expansion of a bilayer film of p-terphenyl ( p-3P). The planes of the phenyl rings are approximately parallel to the substrate in the monolayer structure but rotate out of this plane by 60 ± 20° in the bilayer film of p-3P. As the number of phenyl units is increased from n = 3 to n = 6, bilayer structures are observed having similar packing arrangements of the molecules but with lattice parameters that scale with molecular length.
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