42 research outputs found
Scanning Quantum Dot Microscopy
Interactions between atomic and molecular objects are to a large extent
defined by the nanoscale electrostatic potentials which these objects produce.
We introduce a scanning probe technique that enables three-dimensional imaging
of local electrostatic potential fields with sub-nanometer resolution.
Registering single electron charging events of a molecular quantum dot attached
to the tip of a (qPlus tuning fork) atomic force microscope operated at 5 K, we
quantitatively measure the quadrupole field of a single molecule and the dipole
field of a single metal adatom, both adsorbed on a clean metal surface. Because
of its high sensitivity, the technique can record electrostatic potentials at
large distances from their sources, which above all will help to image complex
samples with increased surface roughness.Comment: main text: 5 pages, 4 figures, supplementary information file: 4
pages, 2 figure
The Computational 2D Materials Database: High-Throughput Modeling and Discovery of Atomically Thin Crystals
We introduce the Computational 2D Materials Database (C2DB), which organises
a variety of structural, thermodynamic, elastic, electronic, magnetic, and
optical properties of around 1500 two-dimensional materials distributed over
more than 30 different crystal structures. Material properties are
systematically calculated by state-of-the art density functional theory and
many-body perturbation theory (GW\!_0 and the Bethe-Salpeter Equation
for 200 materials) following a semi-automated workflow for maximal
consistency and transparency. The C2DB is fully open and can be browsed online
or downloaded in its entirety. In this paper, we describe the workflow behind
the database, present an overview of the properties and materials currently
available, and explore trends and correlations in the data. Moreover, we
identify a large number of new potentially synthesisable 2D materials with
interesting properties targeting applications within spintronics,
(opto-)electronics, and plasmonics. The C2DB offers a comprehensive and easily
accessible overview of the rapidly expanding family of 2D materials and forms
an ideal platform for computational modeling and design of new 2D materials and
van der Waals heterostructures.Comment: Add journal reference and DOI; Minor updates to figures and wordin