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1.
Nanotechnology ; 31(50): 505302, 2020 Dec 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33021238

ABSTRACT

We have studied the capability of He+ focused ion beam (He+-FIB) patterning to fabricate defect arrays on the Si/SiO2/Graphene interface using a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and Raman imaging to probe damage zones. In general, an amorphized 'blister' region of cylindrical symmetry results upon exposing the surface to the stationary focused He+ beam. The topography of the amorphized region depends strongly on the ion dose, DS , (ranging from 103 to 107ions/spot) with craters and holes observed at higher doses. Furthermore, the surface morphology depends on the distance between adjacent irradiated spots, LS . Increasing the dose leads to (enhanced) subsurface amorphization and a local height increase relative to the unexposed regions. At the highest areal ion dose, the average height of a patterned area also increases as ∼1/LS . Correspondingly, in optical micrographs, the µm2-sized patterned surface regions change appearance. These phenomena can be explained by implantation of the He+ ions into the subsurface layers, formation of helium nanobubbles, expansion and modification of the dielectric constant of the patterned material. The corresponding modifications of the terminating graphene monolayer have been monitored by micro Raman imaging. At low ion doses, DS , the graphene becomes modified by carbon atom defects which perturb the 2D lattice (as indicated by increasing D/G Raman mode ratio). Additional x-ray photoionization spectroscopy (XPS) measurements allow us to infer that for moderate ion doses, scattering of He+ ions by the subsurface results in the oxidation of the graphene network. For largest doses and smallest LS values, the He+ beam activates extensive Si/SiO2/C bond rearrangement and a multicomponent material possibly comprising SiC and silicon oxycarbides, SiOC, is observed. We also infer parameter ranges for He+-FIB patterning defect arrays of potential use for pinning transition metal nanoparticles in model studies of heterogeneous catalysis.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 149(19): 194701, 2018 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30466281

ABSTRACT

Temperature Programmed Desorption (TPD) spectroscopy was used to determine the binding energies of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons C n H m (22 ≤ n ≤ 60) with highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. These energies were then used to estimate the dispersive graphite interlayer cohesion by means of a refined extrapolation method proposed by Björk et al. This yields a cohesion energy of 44.0 ± 3.8 meV per carbon atom. We discuss some limits of the TPD-based approach and contrast our values with previous determinations of the interlayer cohesion energy of graphite.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(35): 11254-63, 2016 09 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27501376

ABSTRACT

A combination of mass spectrometry, collision-induced dissociation, ion mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS), and density functional theory (DFT) has been used to study the evolution of anionic species generated by laser-desorption of the near-planar, fluorinated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), C60H21F9 (s). The dominant decay process for isolated, thermally activated C60H21F9(-) species comprises a sequence of multiple regioselective cyclodehydrofluorination and cyclodehydrogenation reactions (eliminating HF and H2, respectively, while forming additional pentagons and/or hexagons). The DFT calculations allow us to set narrow bounds on the structures of the resulting fragment ions by fitting structural models to experimentally determined collision cross sections. These show that the transformation of the precursor anion proceeds via a series of intermediate structures characterized by increasing curvature, ultimately leading to the closed-shell fullerene cage C60(-) as preprogrammed by the precursor structure.

5.
J Phys Chem A ; 120(29): 5868-73, 2016 07 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27379576
6.
Chemphyschem ; 17(3): 352-7, 2016 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26663716

ABSTRACT

Providing a quantitative understanding of the thermodynamics involved in molecular adsorption and self-assembly at a nanostructured carbon material is of fundamental importance and finds outstanding applications in the graphene era. Here, we study the effect of edge perchlorination of coronene, which is a prototypical polyaromatic hydrocarbon, on the binding affinity for the basal planes of graphite. First, by comparing the desorption barrier of hydrogenated versus perchlorinated coronene measured by temperature-programmed desorption, we quantify the enhancement of the strength of physisorption at the single-molecule level though chlorine substitution. Then, by a thermodynamic analysis of the corresponding monolayers based on force-field calculations and statistical mechanics, we show that perchlorination decreases the free energy of self-assembly, not only enthalpically (by enhancing the strength of surface binding), but also entropically (by decreasing the surface concentration). The functional advantage of a chemically modulated 2D self-assembly is demonstrated in the context of the molecule-assisted liquid-phase exfoliation of graphite into graphene.

7.
Anal Chem ; 87(23): 11901-6, 2015 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26553589

ABSTRACT

An apparatus is presented which combines nanoelectrospray ionization for isolation of large molecular ions from solution, mass-to-charge ratio selection in gas-phase, low-energy-ion-beam deposition into a (co-condensed) inert gas matrix and UV laser-induced visible-region photoluminescence (PL) of the matrix isolated ions. Performance is tested by depositing three different types of lanthanoid diketonate cations including also a dissociation product species not directly accessible by chemical synthesis. For these strongly photoluminescent ions, accumulation of some femto- to picomoles in a neon matrix (over a time scale of tens of minutes to several hours) is sufficient to obtain well-resolved dispersed emission spectra. We have ruled out contributions to these spectra due to charge neutralization or fragmentation during deposition by also acquiring photoluminescence spectra of the same ionic species in the gas phase.

8.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 5(3): 457-60, 2014 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26276592

ABSTRACT

C60(2+) and C60(3+) were produced by electron-impact ionization of sublimed C60 and charge-state-selectively codeposited onto a gold mirror substrate held at 5 K together with neon matrix gas containing a few percent of the electron scavengers CO2 or CCl4. This procedure limits charge-changing of the incident fullerene projectiles during matrix isolation. IR, NIR, and UV-vis spectra were then measured. Ten IR absorptions of C60(2+) were identified. C60(3+) was observed to absorb in the NIR region close to the known vibronic bands of C60(+). UV spectra of C60, C60(+), and C60(2+) were almost indistinguishable, consistent with a plasmon-like nature of their UV absorptions. The measurements were supported by DFT and TDDFT calculations, revealing that C60(2+) has a singlet D5d ground state whereas C60(3+) forms a doublet of Ci symmetry. The new results may be of interest regarding the presence of C60(2+) and C60(3+) in space.

9.
J Phys Chem A ; 117(34): 8251-5, 2013 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23902528

ABSTRACT

C60(+) ions were produced by electron-impact ionization of sublimed C60, collimated into an ion beam, turned 90° by an electrostatic deflector to separate them from neutrals, mass filtered by a radio frequency quadrupole, and co-deposited with Ne on a cold 5 K gold-coated sapphire substrate. Infrared absorption spectroscopy revealed the additional presence of C60 and C60(-) in the as-prepared cryogenic matrixes. To change the C60(+)/C60(-) ratio, CCl4 or CO2 electron scavengers were added to the matrix gas. Also taking into account DFT calculations, we have identified nine new previously unpublished IR absorptions of C60(+) and seven of C60(-) in Ne matrixes. Our measurements are in very good agreement with DFT calculations, predicting D5d C60(+) and D3d C60(-) ground states. The new results may be of interest regarding the presence of C60 and C70 (as well as ions thereof) in Space.

10.
J Chem Phys ; 138(10): 104703, 2013 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23514509

ABSTRACT

C58 fullerenes were adsorbed onto room temperature Au(111) surface by low-energy (~6 eV) cluster ion beam deposition under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. The topographic and electronic properties of the deposits were monitored by means of scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM at 4.2 K). Topographic images reveal that at low coverages fullerene cages are pinned by point dislocation defects on the herringbone reconstructed gold terraces (as well as by step edges). At intermediate coverages, pinned monomers act as nucleation centres for the formation of oligomeric C58 chains and 2D islands. At the largest coverages studied, the surface becomes covered by 3D interlinked C58 cages. STM topographic images of pinned single adsorbates are essentially featureless. The corresponding local densities of states are consistent with strong cage-substrate interactions. Topographic images of [C58]n oligomers show a stripe-like intensity pattern oriented perpendicular to the axis connecting the cage centers. This striped pattern becomes even more pronounced in maps of the local density of states. As supported by density functional theory, DFT calculations, and also by analogous STM images previously obtained for C60 polymers [M. Nakaya, Y. Kuwahara, M. Aono, and T. Nakayama, J. Nanosci. Nanotechnol. 11, 2829 (2011)], we conclude that these striped orbital patterns are a fingerprint of covalent intercage bonds. For thick C58 films we have derived a bandgap of 1.2 eV from scanning tunnelling spectroscopy data confirming that the outermost C58 layer behaves as a wide band semiconductor.

11.
Nanotechnology ; 23(41): 415302, 2012 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23018599

ABSTRACT

Molecular oxygen etching of HOPG surfaces prepatterned by Ga(+) focused-ion-beam irradiation (FIB) has been used to generate large-area arrays of nanometer-sized graphite blocks. AFM and SEM imaging show that structures with lateral sizes down to ~100 nm and heights of between 30 and 55 nm can be routinely fabricated. The trenches separating the graphite blocks form in the early oxidation stages via preferential gasification (into CO and CO(2)) of the gridlike amorphized carbon regions written by FIB. In the later oxidative etching stages, gasification of the graphite nanoprism faces laterally terminating the graphite blocks becomes the major reaction channel. Correspondingly, graphite blocks are (further) reduced in lateral extent while the trenches in between are widened. Raman and photoionization spectroscopies indicate that the quality of the topmost nG sheet(s) covering the blocks also decreases with increasing etching time-as the size and lateral density of defect-mediated etch pits increases. nG block arrays are useful substrates with which to probe the size-dependent properties of nanographene, as they comprise large numbers of uniform sheets (ca. 4 × 10(10) cm(-2) for an array of 0.5 × 0.5 µm(2)) thus allowing for the application of area-integrating spectroscopic methods. We demonstrate this by examining the Raman features of nG block arrays which include a graphene-rim-region fingerprint mode. Individual nG sheets can be exfoliated from nG stacks by means of electron-irradiation-induced charging. We have explored a number of printing/manipulation strategies aimed at controllable electromechanical transfer of nG sheet arrays to silicon wafers.

12.
J Chem Phys ; 136(11): 114708, 2012 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22443791

ABSTRACT

A monodispersed fullerene material comprising exclusively C(58) cages was doped with Cs to generate Cs(x)C(58) films of various compositions. The resulting modified properties have been studied using a variety of surface analysis methods with emphasis on thermal desorption and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopies. Cs doping raises the thermal stability of C(58) films which are characterized by quasi-covalent cage-cage bonds between annelated pentagon sites. Desorption mass spectra show emission of significant amounts of C(60) at elevated temperatures implying that Cs doping can activate C(58)→C(60) conversion in the condensed phase. In the case of saturated Cs(x)C(58) films, up to 4.5% of the initially deposited C(58) can be desorbed as C(60). From the spectroscopic data, we infer that Cs insertion and transport into the interstitial sites of the C(58) solid is accompanied by spontaneous electron transfer to the electronegative fullerene framework-leading to a weakening of intercage carbon-carbon bonds. At the same time, the overall cohesion of the solid film is enhanced by the formation of multiple ionic Cs(+) (ß)C(58) (-) (δ) interactions. Near 800 K, Cs(+) activates∕catalyzes concerted disproportionation reactions resulting in the transfer of C(2) from C(58) (-) (δ) to neighbouring cages to yield C(60) (and C(56)). Heating Cs(x)C(58) films to beyond this temperature range yields a (high temperature) stable reaction product with a significantly modified UP spectrum and a finite density of states at the Fermi level.

13.
J Chem Phys ; 136(1): 014701, 2012 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22239794

ABSTRACT

The material formed by depositing C(2)(-) anions onto/into thin C(60) films (on graphite) at room temperature has been studied by means of thermal desorption mass spectroscopy, ultraviolet photoionization spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy. As-prepared, C(2)/C(60) films manifest thermal desorption behaviour which differs significantly from pure C(60) films. Whereas the latter can be fully sublimed, we observe decomposition of C(2)/C(60) films to a high-temperature-stable material while predominantly C(60), C(62), and C(64) are desorbed in parallel. Deposition of C(2)(-) also leads to significantly modified electronic and vibrational properties. Based on DFT model calculations of the Raman spectra, we suggest that as-prepared C(2)/C(60) films contain appreciable amounts of polymeric networks comprising -C(2)-C(60)-C(2)-C(60)- chains. Detection of sublimed C(62) and C(64) upon heating implies that thermal decomposition of C(2)/C(60) films involves addition/uptake of C(2) units into individual fullerene cages. Correspondingly, annealing films up to various intermediate temperatures results in significant modifications to valence-band UP spectra as well as to surface topographies as imaged by AFM. The novel carbonaceous material obtained by heating to T > 950 K has a finite density of states at the Fermi level in contrast to as-prepared C(2)/C(60). It comprises fused fullerene cages.

14.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 12(36): 10671-84, 2010 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20730151

ABSTRACT

This perspective focuses on the cage size dependent properties of novel solid fullerene nanofilms grown by soft-landing of mass-selected C(n)(+) (48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 62, 64, 66 and 68) onto room temperature graphite surfaces under ultra-high vacuum conditions. Such non-isolated-pentagon-ring (non-IPR) fullerene materials are not accessible to standard fullerene preparation methods. The component molecular building blocks of non-IPR films were generated by electron impact induced ionization/fragmentation of sublimed IPR-C(70)(D(5h)) (-->C(n) (n = 68, 66, 64, 62)) or IPR-C(60)(I(h)) (-->C(n) (n = 58, 56, 54, 52, 50)). Non-IPR fullerene films on graphite grow via formation of dendritic C(n) aggregates, whereas deposition of IPR fullerenes under analogous conditions (via deposition of unfragmented C(60)(+) and C(70)(+)) leads to compact islands. The latter are governed by weak van der Waals cage-cage interactions. In contrast, the former are stabilized by covalent intercage bonds as mediated by the non-IPR sites (primarily adjacent pentagon pairs, AP). A significant fraction of the deposited non-IPR C(n) cages can be intactly (re)sublimed by heating. The corresponding mean desorption activation energies, E(des), increase from 2.1 eV for C(68) up to 2.6 eV for C(50). The densities of states in the valence band regions (DOS), surface ionization potentials (sIP) and HOMO-LUMO gaps (Delta) of semiconducting non-IPR films were measured and found to vary strongly with cage size. Overall, the n-dependencies of these properties can be interpreted in terms of covalently interconnected oligomeric structures comprising the most stable (neutral) C(n) isomers-as determined from density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Non-IPR fullerene films are the first known examples of elemental cluster materials in which the cluster building blocks are covalently but reversibly interconnected.

15.
J Chem Phys ; 130(16): 164705, 2009 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19405614

ABSTRACT

Films comprising predominantly novel isomers of C(60) [=C(60)(nIPR)] have been generated by low energy ion beam deposition of vibronically excited C(60)(+) onto graphite followed by selective sublimation of C(60)(I(h)) from the deposited isomer mixture. The incident ions were generated by electron impact ionization/fragmentation of sublimed C(70). Images of the C(60)(nIPR) films obtained by applying atomic force microscopy show aggregates, which we attribute to covalently interlinked C(60)(nIPR) units. The covalent bonds are inferred from the significantly higher thermal stability of the C(60)(nIPR) films compared to the C(60)(I(h)) van der Waals solid-as measured by thermal desorption with mass spectrometric detection of the C(60) mass channel (the only desorbable species). In contrast to the characteristic doublet structure of the occupied valence band in the ultraviolet photoelectron spectrum of pure C(60)(I(h)), the valence band of C(60)(nIPR) films exhibits a triplet feature with the additional peak occurring at a binding energy of approximately 2.6 eV. This is an indicator of the electronic modifications induced by intermolecular bonding. C(60)(nIPR) films exhibit a narrower band gap than found for C(60)(I(h)). They also have significantly different chemical reactivity toward incorporation of thermal energy deuterium atoms. In order to model the experimental photoelectron spectra, various covalently linked oligomers of (#1809)C(60)(C(2v)), the second most stable conventional 60-atom fullerene cage, were calculated by means of the density functional theory. These spectral predictions together with analogous previous observations on related fullerene solids such as C(58) lead us to infer that C(60)(nIPR) films consist of fullerene cage isomers containing one or more adjacent pentagon pairs, which mediate covalent cage-cage interconnection.

16.
J Chem Phys ; 125(22): 224705, 2006 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17176152

ABSTRACT

The reaction of solid C(58) films with atomic deuterium to yield deuterofullerenes, C(58)D(x), has been investigated by thermal desorption spectroscopy coupled with mass spectrometric detection, ultraviolet photoionization spectroscopy (21.2 eV), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The average composition of the deuterofullerenes created depends on deuterium dose, beam flux, and surface temperature. Low deuterium exposures at room temperature yield predominantly C(58)D(6-8) cages. Saturation exposures at room temperature yield mass spectra peaked at C(58)D(26). After saturation exposures at elevated surface temperatures (approximately 500 K), the (subsequently) desorbed material reveals a comparatively narrow mass spectral distribution centered at C(58)D(30). Deuteration is associated with cleavage of covalent cage-cage bonds in the starting C(58) oligomer material, as evidenced by a considerable lowering of the sublimation energies of C(58)D(x) compared to desorption of C(58) desorbed from pure oligomer films. Correspondingly, AFM images reveal a D-induced, thermally activated transition from dendritic C(58) oligomer islands into smooth-rimmed islands composed of deuterated cages. Deuterated films exhibit a significantly lower work function than bare C(58) films. Progressing deuteration also gradually raises the surface ionization potential.

17.
J Chem Phys ; 124(14): 144704, 2006 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16626228

ABSTRACT

A tandem time-of-flight mass spectrometer with an intermediate surface was used to quantify electron transfer during glancing incidence scattering of hyperthermal C(60) (+) (E(coll)=250-500 eV, theta(in)=75 degrees ) from (i) self-assembled monolayers of n-alkylthiols on gold (of various chain lengths), (ii) partly fluorinated alkylthiols on gold, as well as (iii) clean gold surfaces. Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) behave as insulating layers with their thicknesses determining the electron tunneling probability during collision. Correspondingly, a roughly exponential dependence of the neutralization probability on the chain length n was found. A pronounced dependence of the neutral yield on the primary beam kinetic energy indicates that dynamic SAM deformation and associated projectile penetration depth also play a role in determining electron transfer efficiency. Results are consistent with the molecular deformability of SAMs as determined with other experimental methods.

18.
J Chem Phys ; 124(5): 054705, 2006 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16468899

ABSTRACT

Novel semiconducting materials have been prepared under ultrahigh-vacuum conditions by soft-landing mass-selected Cn+ (50< or =n<60; even n) on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite surfaces at mean kinetic energies of 6 eV. In all cases, Cn films grow according to the Volmer-Weber mechanism: the surface is initially decorated by two-dimensional fractal islands, which in later deposition stages become three-dimensional dendritic mounds. We infer that Cn aggregation is governed by reactive sites comprising adjacent pentagons (or heptagons) on individual cages. The resulting covalent cage-cage bonds are responsible for the unusually high thermal stability of the films compared to solid C60. The apparent activation energies for intact Cn sublimation range from 2.2 eV for C58 to 2.6 eV for C50 as derived from thermal desorption spectra. All Cn films exhibit a common valence-band ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy spectral feature located around the center of a broad highest occupied molecular-orbital (HOMO)-derived band (EB approximately 2.5 eV). This feature has been assigned to Cn units covalently linked to each other in polymeric structures. To within experimental accuracy, the same work function (4.8 eV) was determined for thick films of all Cn studied. In contrast, "HOMO" ionization potentials were cage size dependent and significantly lower than that obtained for C60. C58 exhibited the lowest HOMO (6.5 eV). Band gaps of Cn films have been determined by depositing small amounts of Cs atoms onto the topmost film layer. HOMO-lowest unoccupied molecular-orbital-derived band gaps between 0.8 eV (C52) and 1.8 eV (C50) were observed, compared to 1.5 eV for solid C60.

19.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 7(14): 2816-20, 2005 Jul 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16189598

ABSTRACT

A new solid material has been created in ultra high vacuum by utilizing the aggregation process of C58 molecules deposited onto highly oriented pyrolytic graphite from a mass selected low-energy ion beam comprising C58+. Cluster fluxes of up to 3x10(11) ions s-1 cm-2 with impinging kinetic energies of 6+/-0.5 eV were typically applied. Growth of the solid C58 phase proceeds according to the cluster-aggregation-based Volmer-Weber scenario where initially ramified 2D islands transform into 3D pyramid-like structures at higher coverages. The C58 films created exhibit much higher thermal stability than the C60 solid phase. Sublimation of C58 sets in at a temperature of 700 K. Ultraviolet photoionization spectra (He I, 21.2 eV) yield a molecular ionization potential in the range between 6.6 and 7 eV. Density functional and Hartree-Fock theories suggest that the formation of C58 dimers and higher multimers upon deposition/aggregation gives rise to the high thermal stability and unique electronic properties of this material.


Subject(s)
Fullerenes/chemistry , Graphite/chemistry , Biomedical Engineering , Dimerization , Electronics , Kinetics , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Spectrophotometry , Temperature
20.
J Phys Chem B ; 109(29): 14052-8, 2005 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16852764

ABSTRACT

The oxidation states formed during low-temperature oxidation (T < 500 K) of a Ru(0001) surface are identified with photoelectron spectromicroscopy and thermal desorption (TD) spectroscopy. Adsorption and consecutive incorporation of oxygen are studied following the distinct chemical shifts of the Ru 3d(5/2) core levels of the two topmost Ru layers. The evolution of the Ru 3d(5/2) spectra with oxygen exposure at 475 K and the corresponding O2 desorption spectra reveal that about 2 ML of oxygen incorporate into the subsurface region, residing between the first and second Ru layer. Our results suggest that the subsurface oxygen binds to the first and second layer Ru atoms, yielding a metastable surface "oxide", which represents the oxidation state of an atomically well ordered Ru(0001) surface under low-temperature oxidation conditions. Accumulation of more than 3 ML of oxygen is possible via defect-promoted penetration below the second layer when the initial Ru(0001) surface is disordered. Despite its higher capacity for oxygen accumulation, also the disordered Ru surface does not show features characteristic for the crystalline RuO2 islands. Development of lateral heterogeneity in the oxygen concentration is evidenced by the Ru 3d(5/2) images and microspot spectra after the onset of oxygen incorporation, which becomes very pronounced when the oxidation is carried out at T > 550 K. This is attributed to facilitated O incorporation and oxide nucleation in microregions with a high density of defects.

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