Surface Patterning Using Diazonium Ink Filled Nanopipette

Molecular grafting of diazonium is a widely employed surface modification technique. Local electrografting of this species is a promising approach to surface doping and related properties tailoring. The instability of diazonium cation complicates this process, so that this species was generated in s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2015-11, Vol.87 (21), p.10956-10962
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Min, Yu, Yun, Blanchard, Pierre-Yves, Mirkin, Michael V
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Molecular grafting of diazonium is a widely employed surface modification technique. Local electrografting of this species is a promising approach to surface doping and related properties tailoring. The instability of diazonium cation complicates this process, so that this species was generated in situ in many reported studies. In this Article, we report the egress transfer of aryl diazonium cation across the liquid/liquid interface supported at the nanopipette tip that can be used for controlled delivery this species to the external aqueous phase for local substrate patterning. An aryl diazonium salt was prepared with weakly coordinating and lipophilic tetrakis­(pentafluorophenyl)­borate anion stable as a solid and soluble in low polarity media. The chemically stable solution of this salt in 1,2-dichloroethane can be used as “diazonium ink”. The ink-filled nanopipette was employed as a tip in the scanning electrochemical microscope (SECM) for surface patterning with the spatial resolution controlled by the pipette orifice radius and a few nanometers film thickness. The submicrometer-size grafted spots produced on the HOPG surface were located and imaged with the atomic force microscope (AFM).
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.5b02784