Understanding the collective behavior of the quasiparticles in solid-state systems underpins the field of nonvolatile electronics, including the opportunity to control many-body effects for well-desired physical phenomena and their applications. Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) is a wide-energy-bandgap semiconductor, showing immense potential as a platform for low-dimensional device heterostructures. It is an inert dielectric used for gated devices, having a negligible orbital hybridization when placed in contact with other systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntensive efforts have been devoted to surface Ullmann-like coupling in recent years, due to its appealing success towards on-surface synthesis of tailor-made nanostructures. While attentions were mostly drawn on metallic substrates, however, Ullmann dehalogenation and coupling reaction on semimetal surfaces has been seldom addressed. Herein, we demonstrate the self-assembly of 2, 7-dibromopyrene (BrPy) and the well controllable dehalogenation reaction of BrPy on the Bi(111)-Ag substrate with a combination of scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and density functional theory calculations (DFT).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerium oxide has constantly attracted intense attention during the past decade both in research and industry as an appealing catalyst or a noninert support for catalysts, for instance, in the water-gas shift reaction and hydrogenation of the ketone group. Herein, the cerium oxide surface has been chosen to investigate the adsorption and decomposition behaviors of the ,'-bis(1-ethylpropyl)-perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxdiimide (EP-PTCDI) molecule by photoelectron spectroscopy. As expected, EP-PTCDI molecules self-assemble on the cerium oxide surface comprising both trivalent and tetravalent cerium at room temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurface science is an interdisciplinary field involving various subjects such as physics, chemistry, materials, biology and so on, and it plays an increasingly momentous role in both fundamental research and industrial applications. Despite the encouraging progress in characterizing surface/interface nanostructures with atomic and orbital precision under ultra-high-vacuum (UHV) conditions, investigating in situ reactions/processes occurring at the surface/interface under operando conditions becomes a crucial challenge in the field of surface catalysis and surface electrochemistry. Promoted by such pressing demands, high-pressure scanning tunneling microscopy (HP-STM) and ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS), for example, have been designed to conduct measurements under operando conditions on the basis of conventional scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and photoemission spectroscopy, which are proving to become powerful techniques to study various heterogeneous catalytic reactions on the surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFundamental understanding of the bonding motifs that elaborately mediate the formation of supramolecular nanostructures is essential for the rational design of stable artificial organic architectures. Herein, the structural transformation of the adsorption complex of 2, 7-dibromopyrene (Br Py) on the Au(111) surface has been investigated by scanning tunnelling microscopy combined with X-ray photoemission spectroscopy and density function theory calculations. In the initial stage of self-assembly, well ordered patterns are formed in the manner of extended supramolecular structures balanced by intermolecular halogen bonding motifs, whilst the Au(111) reconstruction is still fairly visible.
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