Self-assembly of organic molecules represents an efficient and convenient bottom-up approach for the structural functionalization of surfaces at the nanometer scale. The great potential of assembling supramolecular architectures from organic molecules lies in the vast choice of building blocks that are accessible. This allows to predefine and to direct the molecular organization through the steric and electronic information stored in the molecules. A large variety of homotopic supramolecular structures can be achieved, however limited in complexity. The full realization of highly developed surface architectures for designable chemical functions and physical properties may depend critically on a higher level of complexity, which could be satisfied by utilizing a mixture of different molecular building blocks. Within this thesis, the self-organization of multi-component systems at well-defined metal surfaces is investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy. The mixtures consist of different representatives of linear polyaromatic ligands with carboxylate or pyridyl derived functional groups. The assembly is directed by hydrogen bonding, metal-organic complex formation or a combination of both, i.e. a hierarchical interaction scheme. The aim of this thesis is threefold: First, the homotopic self-assembly of different pyridyl ligands is investigated as a basis for the multi-component systems. One-dimensional chains as well as two dimensional (2D) networks can be formed by copper-pyridyl coordination motifs. The influence of the substrate on these structures will be discussed in detail. Moreover, the self-organization process of multi-components is investigated at the fundamental level. Since functional groups primarily discriminate the different molecular species during the assembly and with that assure a distinguished arrangement, selective bonding schemes are essential for the design of highly ordered supramolecular architectures. Two suitable selective coordination motifs are identified, an iron-carboxylate and a copper-pyridyl complex node. In ligand mixtures, strong preference of one metal species is observed at surfaces, which would not be expected in solution. In addition, redundant mixtures (i.e. ligands of different size but same functional group) serve as model systems to investigate the dynamic self-organization process of modular multicomponent systems, e.g. self-selection or error tolerance, directly with nanometer accuracy. Self-selection is observed if the molecular recognition is steered by a highly reversible coordination bond, while a more robust bonding fosters structural adaption and tolerance to the introduced error (i.e. redundant mixture). These experiments underline the importance of reversibility of the interactions steering the self-assembly process into highly ordered structures. Finally, the extended possibilities due to the multi-component approach for the construction of advanced architectures and structural control are e
Raffaella Buonsanti, Alexander Nicolas Chen, Philippe Benjamin Green, Victoria Lapointe