Jinkyung Kim, Won-Jun Jang, et al.
Physical Review B
Understanding the principles of molecular recognition is a difficult task and calls for investigation of appropriate model systems. Using the manipulation capabilities of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) we analyzed the chiral recognition in self-assembled dimers of helical hydrocarbons at the single molecule level. After manual separation of the two molecules of a dimer with a molecule-terminated STM tip on a Cu(111) surface, their handedness was subsequently determined with a metal atom-terminated tip. We find that these molecules strongly prefer to form heterochiral pairs. Our study shows that single molecule manipulation is a valuable tool to understand intermolecular recognition at surfaces.
Jinkyung Kim, Won-Jun Jang, et al.
Physical Review B
Christopher Lutz, Leo Gross
Europhysics News
William Paul, Susanne Baumann, et al.
Review of Scientific Instruments
Taeyoung Choi, Christopher Lutz, et al.
Current Applied Physics