E02-JEM ARM 300CF
I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Benedikt P.
Klein
,
Matthew A.
Stoodley
,
Joel
Deyerling
,
Luke A.
Rochford
,
Dylan B.
Morgan
,
David G.
Hopkinson
,
Sam
Sullivan-Allsop
,
Henry
Thake
,
Fulden
Eratam
,
Lars
Sattler
,
Sebastian M.
Weber
,
Gerhard
Hilt
,
Alexander
Generalov
,
Alexei
Preobrajenski
,
Thomas
Liddy
,
Leon B. S.
Williams
,
Mhairi A.
Buchan
,
Graham A
Rance
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Alex
Saywell
,
Roman
Gorbachev
,
Sarah J.
Haigh
,
Christopher S.
Allen
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Reinhard
Maurer
,
David A.
Duncan
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25379, 30875, 31695, 31165, 33709]
Open Access
Abstract: Chemical vapour deposition enables large-domain growth of ideal graphene, yet many applications of graphene require the controlled inclusion of specific defects. We present a one-step chemical vapour deposition procedure aimed at retaining the precursor topology when incorporated into the grown carbonaceous film. When azupyrene, the molecular analogue of the Stone–Wales defect in graphene, is used as a precursor, carbonaceous monolayers with a range of morphologies are produced as a function of the copper substrate growth temperature. The higher the substrate temperature during deposition, the closer the resulting monolayer is to ideal graphene. Analysis, with a set of complementary materials characterisation techniques, reveals morphological changes closely correlated with changes in the atomic adsorption heights, network topology, and concentration of 5-/7-membered carbon rings. The engineered defective carbon monolayers can be transferred to different substrates, potentially enabling applications in nanoelectronics, sensorics, and catalysis.
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Sep 2025
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Pablo
Vezzoni Vicente
,
Tobias
Weiss
,
Dennis
Meier
,
Wenchao
Zhao
,
Birce Sena
Tömekçe
,
Marc
G. Cuxart
,
Benedikt P.
Klein
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Anthoula C.
Papageorgiou
,
Matthias
Muntwiler
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Peter
Feulner
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Francesco
Allegretti
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25907]
Abstract: In light of the recent research interest in low-dimensional bismuth structures as spin-active materials and topological insulators, we present a comprehensive characterization of the Bi/Au(111) interface. The nuanced evolution of Bi phases upon deposition in ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) on a Au(111) surface is investigated from semidisordered clusters to few-layer Bi(110) thin films. Particular attention is devoted to the high-coverage, submonolayer phases, commonly grouped under the (𝑃×√3) nomenclature. We bring forth a new model, refining the current understanding of the Bi/Au(111) interface and demonstrating the existence of submonolayer moiré superstructures, whose geometry and superperiodicity depend on their coverage. This tuneable periodicity paves the way for their use as tailored buffer and templating layers for epitaxial growth of thin films on Au(111). Finally, we clarify the growth mode of multilayer Bi(110) as bilayer-by-bilayer, allowing precise thickness control of anisotropically strained thin films. This holistic understanding of the structural properties of the material was enabled by the synergy of several experimental techniques, namely low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM, STS), and x-ray standing waves (XSW), further corroborated by density functional theory (DFT) simulations.
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Oct 2024
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Aleksandr
Baklanov
,
Johannes T.
Kuchle
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Reinhard J.
Maurer
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Eduardo Corral
Rascon
,
Ignacio
Piquero-Zulaica
,
Huynh Thien
Ngo
,
Alexander
Riss
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Paul T. P.
Ryan
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18874, 24276]
Abstract: We present a comprehensive, quantitative multimethod characterization of the geometric and electronic interfacial structure of zinc-porphine (Zn-P) on coinage metal supports, namely, Ag(111) and Cu(111). Complementary techniques including X-ray standing waves, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, bond-resolved atomic force microscopy, and density functional theory calculations reveal the molecular conformations, signal a temperature-dependence of element-specific adsorption heights, rule out a decisive role of the d10 nature of the Zn center for the adsorption configuration, and uncover a considerably increased Zn-P adsorption height on Ag(111) compared to Cu(111). Furthermore, a pronounced out-of-plane displacement of the Zn center upon water ligation is demonstrated, a manifestation of the surface trans-effect. This study thus sheds light on effects of temperature, chemical nature of the metal center, its ligation, and the coinage metal support on interfacial structure and molecular deformation of an archetypical surface-anchored metal-tetrapyrrole.
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Apr 2023
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Peter
Knecht
,
Dennis
Meier
,
Joachim
Reichert
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Johannes
Kuchle
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Peter
Deimel
,
Peter
Feulner
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Guillaume
Médard
,
Ari P.
Seitsonen
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Anthoula
Papageorgiou
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[17634]
Open Access
Abstract: Ru-porphyrins act as convenient pedestals for the assembly of N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) on solid surfaces. Upon deposition of a simple NHC ligand on a close packed Ru-porphyrin monolayer, an extraordinary phenomenon can be observed: Ru-porphyrin molecules are transferred from the silver surface to the next molecular layer. We have investigated the structural features and dynamics of this portering process and analyzed the associated binding strengths and work function changes. A rearrangement of the molecular layer is induced by the NHC uptake: the NHC selective binding to the Ru atoms causes the ejection of whole porphyrin molecules from the molecular layer on silver to the layer on top. This reorganization can be reversed by thermally induced desorption of the NHC ligand. We anticipate that the understanding of such mass transport processes will have crucial implications for the functionalization of surfaces with carbenes.
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Oct 2022
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Johannes T.
Küchle
,
Aleksandr
Baklanov
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Paul
Ryan
,
Peter
Feulner
,
Prashanth
Pendem
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Matthias
Muntwiler
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Felix
Haag
,
Johannes V
Barth
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Francesco
Allegretti
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[15804, 20771]
Open Access
Abstract: Silicene, the two-dimensional (2D) allotrope of silicon, is a promising material for electronics. So far, the most direct synthesis strategy has been to grow it epitaxially on metal surfaces; however, the effect of the strong silicon-metal interaction on the structure and electronic properties of the metal-supported silicene is generally poorly understood. In this work, we consider the 4×4-silicene monolayer grown on Ag(111), probably the most illustrious representative of the 2D silicon family, and show that our experimental results refute the common interpretation of this system as a simple buckled, honeycomb monolayer with a sharp interface to the Ag substrate. Instead, the presented analysis demonstrates the pervasive presence of a second silicon species, which we conclude to be a Si‑Ag alloy stacked between the 2D silicene and the silver substrate and scaffolding the 2D silicene layer. These findings question the current structural understanding of the silicene/Ag(111) interface and may raise expectations of analogous alloy systems in the stabilization of other 2D materials grown epitaxially on metal surfaces.
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Aug 2022
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Peter
Knecht
,
Joachim
Reichert
,
Peter S.
Deimel
,
Peter
Feulner
,
Felix
Haag
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Manuela
Garnica
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Paul T. P.
Ryan
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Anthoula Chrysa
Papageorgiou
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[24320]
Open Access
Abstract: We assess the crucial role of tetrapyrrole flexibility in the CO ligation to distinct Ru‐porphyrins supported on an atomistically well‐defined Ag(111) substrate. Our systematic real space visualisation and manipulation experiments with scanning tunnelling microscopy directly probe the ligation, while bond‐resolving atomic force microscopy and X‐ray standing waves measurements characterise the geometry, X‐ray and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy the electronic structure, and temperature programmed desorption the binding strength. Density functional theory calculations provide additional insight into the functional interface. We unambiguously demonstrate that the substituents regulate the interfacial conformational adaptability, either promoting or obstructing the uptake of axial CO adducts.
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May 2021
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Peter
Knecht
,
Bodong
Zhang
,
Joachim
Reichert
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Felix
Haag
,
Paul
Ryan
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Peter S.
Deimel
,
Peter
Feulner
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Guillaume
Médard
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Anthoula C.
Papageorgiou
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[24320]
Abstract: The controlled arrangement of N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) on solid surfaces is a current challenge of surface functionalization. We introduce a strategy of using Ru porphyrins in order to control both the orientation and lateral arrangement of NHCs on a planar surface. The coupling of the NHC to the Ru porphyrin is a facile process which takes place on the interface: we apply NHCs as functional, robust pillars on well-defined, preassembled Ru porphyrin monolayers on silver and characterize these interfaces with atomic precision via a battery of experimental techniques and theoretical considerations. The NHCs assemble at room temperature modularly and reversibly on the Ru porphyrin arrays. We demonstrate a selective and complete functionalization of the Ru centers. With its binding, the NHC modifies the interaction of the Ru porphyrin with the Ag surface, displacing the Ru atom by 1 Å away from the surface. This arrangement of NHCs allows us to address individual ligands by controlled manipulation with the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope, creating patterned structures on the nanometer scale.
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Mar 2021
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I09-Surface and Interface Structural Analysis
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Peter
Knecht
,
Paul T. P.
Ryan
,
David A.
Duncan
,
Li
Jiang
,
Joachim
Reichert
,
Peter S.
Deimel
,
Felix
Haag
,
Johannes T.
Kuchle
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Tien-Lin
Lee
,
Martin
Schwarz
,
Manuela
Garnica
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Anthoula C.
Papageorgiou
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[24320, 17634]
Abstract: The adsorption and monolayer self-assembly of functional metal–organic blocks on solid surfaces are critical for the physicochemical properties of these low-dimensional materials. Although modern microscopy tools are very sensitive to the lateral arrangement of such blocks, they are still unable to offer directly the complete structural analysis especially for nonplanar molecules containing different atoms. Here, we apply a combinatorial approach for the characterization of such interfaces, which enables unexpected insights. An archetypal metalloporphyrin on a catalytically active surface as a function of its molecular coverage and substituent arrangement is characterized by low-energy electron diffraction, scanning probe microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, normal-incidence X-ray standing waves, and density functional theory. We look into Ru tetraphenyl porphyrin (Ru-TPP) on Ag(111), which is also converted into its planarized derivates via surface-assisted cyclodehydrogenation reactions. Depending on the arrangement of the phenyl substituents, the Ru atoms have distinct electronic structures and the porphyrin macrocycles adapt differently to the surface: saddle shape (pristine Ru-TPP) or bowl shape (planarized Ru-TPP derivates). In all cases, the Ru atom resides close to the surface (2.59/2.45 Å), preferably located at hollow sites and in the interface between the plane of the porphyrin macrocycle and the Ag surface. For the more flexible pristine Ru-TPP, we identify an additional self-assembled structure, allowing the molecular density of the self-assembled monolayer to be tuned within ∼20%. This precise analysis is central to harnessing the potential of metalloporphyrin/metal interfaces in functional systems.
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Jan 2021
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Aleksandr
Baklanov
,
Manuela
Garnica
,
Anton
Robert
,
Marie-Laure
Bocquet
,
Knud
Seufert
,
Johannes T.
Kuchle
,
Paul T. P.
Ryan
,
Felix
Haag
,
Reza
Kakavandi
,
Francesco
Allegretti
,
Willi
Auwärter
Abstract: We report the on-surface synthesis of a nonmetal porphyrin, namely, silicon tetraphenylporphyrin (Si-TPP), by the deposition of atomic silicon onto a free-base TPP layer on a Ag(100) surface under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions. Scanning tunneling microscopy provides insights into the self-assembly of the TPP molecules before and after Si insertion. Silicon coordinates with all four nitrogen atoms of the TPP macrocycle and interacts with a silver atom of the substrate as confirmed by scanning tunneling spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and complementary density functional theory calculations. The Si-TPP complex presents a saddle-shaped conformation that is stable under STM manipulation. Our study shows how protocols established for the on-surface metalation of tetrapyrroles can be adopted to achieve nonmetal porphyrins. Complementary experiments yielding Si-TPP and Ge-TPP on Ag(111) highlight the applicability to different main group elements and supports. The success of our nonmetal porphyrin synthesis procedure is further corroborated by a temperature-programmed desorption experiment, revealing the desorption of Ge-TPP. This extension of interfacial complex formation beyond metal elements opens promising prospects for new tetrapyrrole architectures with distinct properties and functionalities.
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Jan 2020
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David A.
Duncan
,
Peter S.
Deimel
,
Alissa
Wiengarten
,
Mateusz
Paszkiewicz
,
Pablo
Casado Aguilar
,
Robert G.
Acres
,
Florian
Klappenberger
,
Willi
Auwärter
,
Ari Paavo
Seitsonen
,
Johannes V.
Barth
,
Francesco
Allegretti
Abstract: In situ preparation of oxotitanium tetraphenylporphyrin (TiO-TPP) on Ag(111) under ultra-high vacuum conditions was achieved in a multi-step procedure starting from adsorbed free-base tetraphenylporphyrin (2H-TPP). The final product as well as the intermediate titanium tetraphenylporphyrin (Ti-TPP) were characterized by a suite of surface-sensitive spectroscopic tools combined with scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory (DFT), and compared against the parent 2H-TPP species. Facile oxidation of Ti-TPP with molecular oxygen was observed at 300 K, with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) from the Ti 2p core levels supporting a change in the oxidation state from Ti2+ to Ti4+. N K-edge and Ti L-edge NEXAFS suggest that the tetrapyrrole macrocycle conformation is modified upon binding to oxygen, in agreement with DFT calculations that predict a marked change of the local environment of the Ti centers upon oxygen attachment. O K-edge NEXAFS and O 1s energy-scanned photoelectron diffraction from the resulting TiO-TPP monolayer provide strong evidence for the presence of a titanium-oxygen double bond, with the latter technique yielding a bond length of 1.56 ± 0.02 Å. The majority of adsorbed TiO-TPP species have the oxo group pointing away from the surface rather than towards it, and thus the oxygen atom can potentially interact coordinatively with external species. Both the highly reactive, intermediate Ti TPP species and the final product TiO-TPP are of great interest for catalytic applications.
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Nov 2019
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