Electron core-level spectroscopies can effectively be used to investigate electron transfer rates at organic/inorganic interfaces occurring within few femtoseconds. The core-level excitation at an adsorbed molecule strongly perturbs the system and calls for a proper theoretical description. On the other hand it induces novel phenomena such as backward electron transfer (substrate-to-molecule) as we measure by X-ray resonant photoemission and calculate by a theoretical framework based on density-functional theory (DFT) [1]. The rates can be controlled by varying molecular properties like the adsorption angle [2], as well as by tailoring the substrate like we show here for molecules on graphene. N1s core excitation induces ultrafast electron transfer (τ=4fs) for bipyridine molecules on epitaxial graphene/Ni(111), which is characterized by a strong hybridization between C and metal states. We demonstrate that this interface can be decoupled by the addition of a second layer of graphene, so that the one in contact with the molecule is less hybridized with Ni underneath. In that case, transfer rates decrease by about one order of magnitude in the experiments and in the simulations, whereas no transfer is in principle expected for molecules on freestanding graphene within the current description. [1] G. Fratesi, C. Motta, M. I. Trioni, G. P. Brivio, and D. Sánchez-Portal, J. Phys. Chem. C 118 (2014) 8775 [2] D. Cvetko, G. Fratesi, G. Kladnik, A. Cossaro, G.P. Brivio, L. Venkataraman, and A. Morgante, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 18 (2016) 22140

Substrate induced ultrafast electron injection dynamics at organic-graphene interfaces / A. Ravikumar, G. Kladnik, M. Muller, A. Cossaro, G. Bavdek, L. Patera, D. Sànchez Portal, L. Venkataraman, A. Morgante, G..P. Brivio, D. Cvetko, G. Fratesi. ((Intervento presentato al 10. convegno Ultrafast Surface Dynamics tenutosi a Inzell nel 2017.

Substrate induced ultrafast electron injection dynamics at organic-graphene interfaces

G. Fratesi
Ultimo
2017

Abstract

Electron core-level spectroscopies can effectively be used to investigate electron transfer rates at organic/inorganic interfaces occurring within few femtoseconds. The core-level excitation at an adsorbed molecule strongly perturbs the system and calls for a proper theoretical description. On the other hand it induces novel phenomena such as backward electron transfer (substrate-to-molecule) as we measure by X-ray resonant photoemission and calculate by a theoretical framework based on density-functional theory (DFT) [1]. The rates can be controlled by varying molecular properties like the adsorption angle [2], as well as by tailoring the substrate like we show here for molecules on graphene. N1s core excitation induces ultrafast electron transfer (τ=4fs) for bipyridine molecules on epitaxial graphene/Ni(111), which is characterized by a strong hybridization between C and metal states. We demonstrate that this interface can be decoupled by the addition of a second layer of graphene, so that the one in contact with the molecule is less hybridized with Ni underneath. In that case, transfer rates decrease by about one order of magnitude in the experiments and in the simulations, whereas no transfer is in principle expected for molecules on freestanding graphene within the current description. [1] G. Fratesi, C. Motta, M. I. Trioni, G. P. Brivio, and D. Sánchez-Portal, J. Phys. Chem. C 118 (2014) 8775 [2] D. Cvetko, G. Fratesi, G. Kladnik, A. Cossaro, G.P. Brivio, L. Venkataraman, and A. Morgante, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 18 (2016) 22140
15-giu-2017
Settore FIS/03 - Fisica della Materia
https://www.uni-due.de/usd10/index.php
Substrate induced ultrafast electron injection dynamics at organic-graphene interfaces / A. Ravikumar, G. Kladnik, M. Muller, A. Cossaro, G. Bavdek, L. Patera, D. Sànchez Portal, L. Venkataraman, A. Morgante, G..P. Brivio, D. Cvetko, G. Fratesi. ((Intervento presentato al 10. convegno Ultrafast Surface Dynamics tenutosi a Inzell nel 2017.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/511923
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