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Published November 16, 2006 | Published
Journal Article Open

Control of the Stability, Electron-Transfer Kinetics, and pH-Dependent Energetics of Si/H_2O Interfaces through Methyl Termination of Si(111) Surfaces

Abstract

Methyl-terminated, n-type, (111)-oriented Si surfaces were prepared via a two-step chlorination-alkylation method. This surface modification passivated the Si surface toward electrochemical oxidation and thereby allowed measurements of interfacial electron-transfer processes in contact with aqueous solutions. The resulting semiconductor/liquid junctions exhibited interfacial kinetics behavior in accord with the ideal model of a semiconductor/liquid junction. In contrast to the behavior of H-terminated Si(111) surfaces, current density vs. potential measurements of CH_3-terminated Si(111) surfaces in contact with an electron acceptor having a pH-independent redox potential (methyl viologen^(2+/+)) were used to verify that the band edges of the modified Si electrode were fixed with respect to changes in solution pH. The results provide strong evidence that the energetics of chemically modified Si interfaces can be fixed with respect to pH and show that the band-edge energies of Si can be tuned independently of pH-derived variations in the electrochemical potential of the solution redox species.

Additional Information

© 2006 American Chemical Society. Received 12 July 2006. Published online 24 October 2006. Published in print 1 November 2006. We acknowledge the NSF, grant CHE-0604894, for support of this work. XPS data were collected at the Molecular Materials Research Center of the Beckman Institute of the California Institute of Technology.

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August 19, 2023
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