95 research outputs found
Surfactant-Mediated Epitaxial Growth of Single-Layer Graphene in an Unconventional Orientation on SiC
We report the use of a surfactant molecule during the epitaxy of graphene on
SiC(0001) that leads to the growth in an unconventional orientation, namely
rotation with respect to the SiC lattice. It yields a very
high-quality single-layer graphene with a uniform orientation with respect to
the substrate, on the wafer scale. We find an increased quality and homogeneity
compared to the approach based on the use of a pre-oriented template to induce
the unconventional orientation. Using spot profile analysis low energy electron
diffraction, angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, and the normal
incidence x-ray standing wave technique, we assess the crystalline quality and
coverage of the graphene layer. Combined with the presence of a
covalently-bound graphene layer in the conventional orientation underneath, our
surfactant-mediated growth offers an ideal platform to prepare epitaxial
twisted bilayer graphene via intercalation.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Quantification of finite-temperature effects on adsorption geometries of -conjugated molecules
The adsorption structure of the molecular switch azobenzene on Ag(111) is
investigated by a combination of normal incidence x-ray standing waves and
dispersion-corrected density functional theory. The inclusion of non-local
collective substrate response (screening) in the dispersion correction improves
the description of dense monolayers of azobenzene, which exhibit a substantial
torsion of the molecule. Nevertheless, for a quantitative agreement with
experiment explicit consideration of the effect of vibrational mode
anharmonicity on the adsorption geometry is crucial.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Azobenzene/Ag(111)
The adsorption structure of the molecular switch azobenzene on Ag(111) is
investigated by a combination of normal incidence x-ray standing waves and
dispersion-corrected density functional theory. The inclusion of nonlocal
collective substrate response (screening) in the dispersion correction
improves the description of dense monolayers of azobenzene, which exhibit a
substantial torsion of the molecule. Nevertheless, for a quantitative
agreement with experiment explicit consideration of the effect of vibrational
mode anharmonicity on the adsorption geometry is crucial
Raman spectra of epitaxial graphene on SiC and of epitaxial graphene transferred to SiO2
Raman spectra were measured for mono-, bi- and trilayer graphene grown on SiC
by solid state graphitization, whereby the number of layers was pre-assigned by
angle-resolved ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy. It was found that the
only unambiguous fingerprint in Raman spectroscopy to identify the number of
layers for graphene on SiC(0001) is the linewidth of the 2D (or D*) peak. The
Raman spectra of epitaxial graphene show significant differences as compared to
micromechanically cleaved graphene obtained from highly oriented pyrolytic
graphite crystals. The G peak is found to be blue-shifted. The 2D peak does not
exhibit any obvious shoulder structures but it is much broader and almost
resembles a single-peak even for multilayers. Flakes of epitaxial graphene were
transferred from SiC onto SiO2 for further Raman studies. A comparison of the
Raman data obtained for graphene on SiC with data for epitaxial graphene
transferred to SiO2 reveals that the G peak blue-shift is clearly due to the
SiC substrate. The broadened 2D peak however stems from the graphene structure
itself and not from the substrate.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figure
Quantum transport through STM-lifted single PTCDA molecules
Using a scanning tunneling microscope we have measured the quantum
conductance through a PTCDA molecule for different configurations of the
tip-molecule-surface junction. A peculiar conductance resonance arises at the
Fermi level for certain tip to surface distances. We have relaxed the molecular
junction coordinates and calculated transport by means of the Landauer/Keldysh
approach. The zero bias transmission calculated for fixed tip positions in
lateral dimensions but different tip substrate distances show a clear shift and
sharpening of the molecular chemisorption level on increasing the STM-surface
distance, in agreement with experiment.Comment: accepted for publication in Applied Physics
Simple extension of the plane-wave final state in photoemission: Bringing understanding to the photon-energy dependence of two-dimensional materials
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is a method that measures orbital and band structure contrast through the momentum distribution of photoelectrons. Its simplest interpretation is obtained in the plane-wave approximation, according to which photoelectrons propagate freely to the detector. The photoelectron momentum distribution is then essentially given by the Fourier transform of the real-space orbital. While the plane-wave approximation is remarkably successful in describing the momentum distributions of aromatic compounds, it generally fails to capture kinetic-energy-dependent final-state interference and dichroism effects. Focusing our present study on quasi-freestanding monolayer graphene as the archetypical two-dimensional (2D) material, we observe an exemplary Ekin-dependent modulation of, and a redistribution of spectral weight within, its characteristic horseshoe signature around the K¯ and K¯′ points: both effects indeed cannot be rationalized by the plane-wave final state. Our data are, however, in remarkable agreement with ab initio time-dependent density functional simulations of a freestanding graphene layer and can be explained by a simple extension of the plane-wave final state, permitting the two dipole-allowed partial waves emitted from the C 2pz orbitals to scatter in the potential of their immediate surroundings. Exploiting the absolute photon flux calibration of the Metrology Light Source, this scattered-wave approximation allows us to extract Ekin-dependent amplitudes and phases of both partial waves directly from photoemission data. The scattered-wave approximation thus represents a powerful yet intuitive refinement of the plane-wave final state in photoemission of 2D materials and beyond
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