Langmuir, Vol.23, No.20, 10184-10189, 2007
Chemical, electrochemical, and structural stability of low-density self-assembled monolayers
The stability of low-density self-assembled monolayers of mercaptohexadecanoic acid on gold is studied under a variety of storage conditions-air at room temperature, argon at room temperature and 4 degrees C, and ethanol at room temperature. The structural monotony of the low-density monolayers was assessed by monitoring the alkyl chains of LDSAMs by grazing-angle Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy as a function of time. Independently of the storage conditions, both symmetric and asymmetric methylene stretches at 2923 and 2852 cm(-1) decreased after 4 weeks to 2919 and 2849 cm-1, respectively. These data suggest an increased ordering of the alkyl chains that is distinctly different from that of conventional high-density monolayers of mercaptohexadecanoic acid included as a reference in this study. As a further extension of this observation, the electrochemical barrier properties of the lowdensity monolayers were assessed by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and did not change significantly for any of the storage conditions over a period of 4 weeks. Moreover, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to assess the chemical changes in the low-density monolayers over time. The chemical composition was essentially unaltered for all storage conditions. Specifically, oxidation of the sulfur headgroup, a common cause of monolayer degradation, was excluded for all test conditions on the basis of XPS analysis. This study confirms excellent storage stability for low-density monolayers under commonly used storage conditions and bridges an important technological gap between these systems and conventional high-density systems.