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1.
ACS Nano ; 10(7): 6474-83, 2016 07 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27014920

RESUMEN

The epitaxy of many organic films on inorganic substrates can be classified within the framework of rigid lattices which helps to understand the origin of energy gain driving the epitaxy of the films. Yet, there are adsorbate-substrate combinations with distinct mutual orientations for which this classification fails and epitaxy cannot be explained within a rigid lattice concept. It has been proposed that tiny shifts in atomic positions away from ideal lattice points, so-called static distortion waves (SDWs), are responsible for the observed orientational epitaxy in such cases. Using low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy, we provide direct experimental evidence for SDWs in organic adsorbate films, namely hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene on graphite. They manifest as wave-like sub-Ångström molecular displacements away from an ideal adsorbate lattice which is incommensurate with graphite. By means of a density-functional-theory based model, we show that, due to the flexibility in the adsorbate layer, molecule-substrate energy is gained by straining the intermolecular bonds and that the resulting total energy is minimal for the observed domain orientation, constituting the orientational epitaxy. While structural relaxation at an interface is a common assumption, the combination of the precise determination of the incommensurate epitaxial relation, the direct observation of SDWs in real space, and their identification as the sole source of epitaxial energy gain constitutes a comprehensive proof of this effect.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 24(40): 405702, 2013 Oct 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24029081

RESUMEN

We investigate the optical properties of hydrogenated α-Sn nanocrystals up to diameters of 3.6 nm in the framework of an ab initio pseudopotential method including spin-orbit interaction (SOI) and the repeated supercell approximation. The fundamental absorption and emission edges are determined including quasiparticle effects and electron-hole interaction. The atomic geometries in the ground and excited electronic states follow from total energy optimization. We discuss the oscillator strengths of the optical absorption near the fundamental gaps for the most important transitions. We demonstrate that the spectra can only be correctly described including SOI. The strongly size-dependent Stokes shifts between optical absorption and emission are shown to be mainly a consequence of the different atomic geometries.

3.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 25(39): 395305, 2013 Oct 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24002054

RESUMEN

We present first-principles studies of the optical absorbance of the group IV honeycomb crystals graphene, silicene, germanene, and tinene. We account for many-body effects on the optical properties by using the non-local hybrid functional HSE06. The optical absorption peaks are blueshifted due to quasiparticle corrections, while the influence on the low-frequency absorbance remains unchanged and reduces to a universal value related to the Sommerfeld fine structure constant. At the Dirac points spin-orbit interaction opens fundamental band gaps; parabolic bands with a very small effective mass emerge. Consequently, the low-frequency absorbance is modified with a spin-orbit-induced transparency region and an increase of the absorbance at the fundamental absorption edge.

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