Epitaxial growth of WTe offers significant advantages, including the production of high-quality films, possible long-range in-plane ordering, and precise control over layer thicknesses. However, the mean island size of WTe grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) in the literature is only a few tens of nanometers, which is not suitable for the implementation of devices at large lateral scales. Here we report the growth of T -WTe ultrathin films by MBE on monolayer (ML) graphene, reaching a mean flake size of ≃110 nm, which is, on overage, more than three times larger than previous results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUllmann coupling or, more generally, dehalogenative aryl-aryl coupling, is one of the most widely exploited chemical reactions to obtain one- and two-dimensional polymers on metal surfaces. It is generally described as a two-step reaction: (i) dehalogenation, resulting in the formation of a stable intermediate organometallic phase and subsequent (ii) C-C coupling. The topology of the resulting polymer depends on the number and positions of the halogen atoms in the haloaromatic precursor, although its orientation and order are determined by the structure of the intermediate phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSilicon oxide can be formed in a crystalline form, when prepared on a metallic substrate. It is a candidate support catalyst and possibly the ultimately thin version of a dielectric host material for two-dimensional materials and heterostructures. We determine the atomic structure and chemical bonding of the ultimately thin version of the oxide, epitaxially grown on Ru(0001).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerium intermetallics have raised a lot of interest for the past forty years thanks to their very unusual and interesting electronic and magnetic properties. This can be explained by the peculiar electronic configuration of Ce (4f1) that allows different oxidation states leading to singular behavior such as quantum phase transitions, heavy-fermion behavior and the Kondo effect. In this work, we used a mixed-valence molecular analogue to study the Kondo effect down to the atomic scale by means of scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS) for which new many-body effects are expected to emerge due to reduced dimensionality and specific chemical environment of the 4f-ion.
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