Abstract
Transition metal complexes with β-diketonate and
diamine ligands are valuable precursors for the chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
of metal oxide nanomaterials, but the metal-ligand bond dissociation mechanism
on the growth surface is not clarified yet. We address this question by Density
Functional Theory (DFT) and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) in
combination with the Bluemoon (BM) statistical sampling approach. AIMD
simulations of the Zn β-diketonate-diamine complex Zn(hfa)2TMEDA
(hfa = 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoro-2,4-pentanedionate; TMEDA = N,N,N’,N’-tetramethylethylenediamine)
show that rolling diffusion of this precursor at 500 K on a hydroxylated silica
slab leads to an octahedral-to-square pyramidal rearrangement of its molecular
geometry. The free energy profile of the octahedral-to-square pyramidal
conversion indicates that the process barrier (5.8 kcal/mol) is of the order of
magnitude of the thermal energy at the operating temperature. The formation of
hydrogen bonds with surface hydroxyls plays a key role in aiding the dissociation
of a Zn-O bond. In the square-pyramidal complex, the Zn center has a free
coordination position, which might promote the interaction with incoming
reagents on the deposition surface. These results provide a valuable atomistic
insight on the molecule-to-material conversion process which, in perspective,
might help to tailor by design the first nucleation stages of the target
ZnO-based nanostructures.
Supplementary materials
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331 Final.pov
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zn cvd gif
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