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Dive into the research topics where Alexander V. Generalov is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander V. Generalov.


Nature Communications | 2014

Strong ferromagnetism at the surface of an antiferromagnet caused by buried magnetic moments

A. Chikina; M. Höppner; S. Seiro; Kurt Kummer; S. Danzenbächer; S. Patil; Alexander V. Generalov; M. Güttler; Yu. Kucherenko; E. V. Chulkov; Yu. M. Koroteev; K. Koepernik; C. Geibel; M. Shi; M. Radovic; C. Laubschat; D. V. Vyalikh

Carrying a large, pure spin magnetic moment of 7 μB per atom in the half-filled 4f shell, divalent europium is an outstanding element for assembling novel magnetic devices in which a two-dimensional electron gas may be polarized due to exchange interaction with an underlying magnetically-active Eu layer. Here we show that the Si-Rh-Si surface trilayer of the antiferromagnet EuRh2Si2 bears a surface state, which exhibits an unexpected and large spin splitting controllable by temperature. The splitting sets in below ~32.5 K, well above the ordering temperature of the Eu 4f moments (~24.5 K) in the bulk, indicating a larger ordering temperature in the topmost Eu layers. The driving force for the itinerant ferromagnetism at the surface is the aforementioned exchange interaction. Such a splitting may also be induced into states of functional surface layers deposited onto the surface of EuRh2Si2 or similarly ordered magnetic materials with metallic or semiconducting properties.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Exciton Binding Energy and the Nature of Emissive States in Organometal Halide Perovskites.

Kaibo Zheng; Qiushi Zhu; Mohamed Abdellah; Maria Messing; Wei Zhang; Alexander V. Generalov; Yuran Niu; Lynn Ribaud; Sophie E. Canton; Tõnu Pullerits

Characteristics of nanoscale materials are often different from the corresponding bulk properties providing new, sometimes unexpected, opportunities for applications. Here we investigate the properties of 8 nm colloidal nanoparticles of MAPbBr3 perovskites and contrast them to the ones of large microcrystallites representing a bulk. X-ray spectroscopies provide an exciton binding energy of 0.32 ± 0.10 eV in the nanoparticles. This is 5 times higher than the value of bulk crystals (0.084 ± 0.010 eV), and readily explains the high fluorescence quantum yield in nanoparticles. In the bulk, at high excitation concentrations, the fluorescence intensity has quadratic behavior following the Saha-Langmuir model due to the nongeminate recombination of charges forming the emissive exciton states. In the nanoparticles, a linear dependence is observed since the excitation concentration per particle is significantly less than one. Even the bulk shows linear emission intensity dependence at lower excitation concentrations. In this case, the average excitation spacing becomes larger than the carrier diffusion length suppressing the nongeminate recombination. From these considerations we obtain the charge carrier diffusion length in MAPbBr3 of 100 nm.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Controlled assembly of graphene-capped nickel, cobalt and iron silicides

Oleg Yu. Vilkov; A. V. Fedorov; D. Usachov; L. V. Yashina; Alexander V. Generalov; K. Borygina; N. I. Verbitskiy; A. Grüneis; D. V. Vyalikh

The unique properties of graphene have raised high expectations regarding its application in carbon-based nanoscale devices that could complement or replace traditional silicon technology. This gave rise to the vast amount of researches on how to fabricate high-quality graphene and graphene nanocomposites that is currently going on. Here we show that graphene can be successfully integrated with the established metal-silicide technology. Starting from thin monocrystalline films of nickel, cobalt and iron, we were able to form metal silicides of high quality with a variety of stoichiometries under a Chemical Vapor Deposition grown graphene layer. These graphene-capped silicides are reliably protected against oxidation and can cover a wide range of electronic materials/device applications. Most importantly, the coupling between the graphene layer and the silicides is rather weak and the properties of quasi-freestanding graphene are widely preserved.


Nature Communications | 2016

ARPES view on surface and bulk hybridization phenomena in the antiferromagnetic Kondo lattice CeRh2Si2

S. Patil; Alexander V. Generalov; M. Güttler; P. Kushwaha; A. Chikina; K. Kummer; T. C. Rödel; A. F. Santander-Syro; N. Caroca-Canales; C. Geibel; S. Danzenbächer; Yu. Kucherenko; C. Laubschat; J. W. Allen; D. V. Vyalikh

The hybridization between localized 4f electrons and itinerant electrons in rare-earth-based materials gives rise to their exotic properties like valence fluctuations, Kondo behaviour, heavy-fermions, or unconventional superconductivity. Here we present an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study of the Kondo lattice antiferromagnet CeRh2Si2, where the surface and bulk Ce-4f spectral responses were clearly resolved. The pronounced 4f 0 peak seen for the Ce terminated surface gets strongly suppressed in the bulk Ce-4f spectra taken from a Si-terminated crystal due to much larger f-d hybridization. Most interestingly, the bulk Ce-4f spectra reveal a fine structure near the Fermi edge reflecting the crystal electric field splitting of the bulk magnetic 4f 15/2 state. This structure presents a clear dispersion upon crossing valence states, providing direct evidence of f-d hybridization. Our findings give precise insight into f-d hybridization penomena and highlight their importance in the antiferromagnetic phases of Kondo lattices.


Nature Communications | 2013

Interplay of Dirac fermions and heavy quasiparticles in solids

M. Höppner; S. Seiro; A. Chikina; A. V. Fedorov; M. Güttler; S. Danzenbächer; Alexander V. Generalov; Kurt Kummer; S. Patil; S. L. Molodtsov; Y.-U. Kucherenko; C. Geibel; V. N. Strocov; M. Shi; M. Radovic; T. Schmitt; C. Laubschat; D. V. Vyalikh

Many-body interactions in crystalline solids can be conveniently described in terms of quasiparticles with strongly renormalized masses as compared with those of non-interacting particles. Examples of extreme mass renormalization are on the one hand graphene, where the charge carriers obey the linear dispersion relation of massless Dirac fermions, and on the other hand heavy-fermion materials where the effective electron mass approaches the mass of a proton. Here we show that both extremes, Dirac fermions, like they are found in graphene and extremely heavy quasiparticles characteristic for Kondo materials, may not only coexist in a solid but can also undergo strong mutual interactions. Using the example of EuRh₂Si₂, we explicitly demonstrate that these interactions can take place at the surface and in the bulk. The presence of the linear dispersion is imposed solely by the crystal symmetry, whereas the existence of heavy quasiparticles is caused by the localized nature of the 4f states.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Hole doping of graphene supported on Ir(111) by AlBr3

Nikolay A. Vinogradov; Konstantin A. Simonov; Alexei Zakharov; Justin W. Wells; Alexander V. Generalov; A. S. Vinogradov; Nils Mårtensson; Alexei Preobrajenski

In this letter, we report an easy and tenable way to tune the type of charge carriers in graphene, using a buried layer of AlBr3 and its derivatives on the graphene/Ir(111) interface. Upon the deposition of AlBr3 on graphene/Ir(111) and subsequent temperature-assisted intercalation of graphene/Ir(111) with atomic Br and AlBr3, pronounced hole doping of graphene is observed. The evolution of the graphene/Br-AlBr3/Ir(111) system at different stages of intercalation has been investigated by means of microbeam low-energy electron microscopy/electron diffraction, core-level photoelectron spectroscopy, and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy.


ChemPhysChem | 2016

Ionic Liquid Ordering at an Oxide Surface.

Michael Wagstaffe; Mark J. Jackman; Karen L. Syres; Alexander V. Generalov; Andrew G. Thomas

Abstract The interaction of the ionic liquid [C4C1Im][BF4] with anatase TiO2, a model photoanode material, has been studied using a combination of synchrotron radiation photoelectron spectroscopy and near‐edge X‐ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy. The system is of interest as a model for fundamental electrolyte–electrode and dye‐sensitized solar cells. The initial interaction involves degradation of the [BF4]− anion, resulting in incorporation of F into O vacancies in the anatase surface. At low coverages, [C4C1Im][BF4] is found to order at the anatase(101) surface via electrostatic attraction, with the imidazolium ring oriented 32±4° from the anatase TiO2 surface. As the coverage of ionic liquid increases, the influence of the oxide surface on the topmost layers is reduced and the ordering is lost.


Nano Letters | 2017

Spin Orientation of Two-Dimensional Electrons Driven by Temperature-Tunable Competition of Spin–Orbit and Exchange–Magnetic Interactions

Alexander V. Generalov; M. M. Otrokov; A. Chikina; Kristin Kliemt; Kurt Kummer; M. Höppner; M. Güttler; S. Seiro; Alexander Fedorov; Susanne Schulz; S. Danzenbächer; E. V. Chulkov; Christoph Geibel; C. Laubschat; Pavel Dudin; M. Hoesch; T. K. Kim; M. Radovic; M. Shi; Nicholas C. Plumb; C. Krellner; D. V. Vyalikh

Finding ways to create and control the spin-dependent properties of two-dimensional electron states (2DESs) is a major challenge for the elaboration of novel spin-based devices. Spin-orbit and exchange-magnetic interactions (SOI and EMI) are two fundamental mechanisms that enable access to the tunability of spin-dependent properties of carriers. The silicon surface of HoRh2Si2 appears to be a unique model system, where concurrent SOI and EMI can be visualized and controlled by varying the temperature. The beauty and simplicity of this system lie in the 4f moments, which act as a multiple tuning instrument on the 2DESs, as the 4f projections parallel and perpendicular to the surface order at essentially different temperatures. Here we show that the SOI locks the spins of the 2DESs exclusively in the surface plane when the 4f moments are disordered: the Rashba-Bychkov effect. When the temperature is gradually lowered and the system experiences magnetic order, the rising EMI progressively competes with the SOI leading to a fundamental change in the spin-dependent properties of the 2DESs. The spins rotate and reorient toward the out-of-plane Ho 4f moments. Our findings show that the direction of the spins and the spin-splitting of the two-dimensional electrons at the surface can be manipulated in a controlled way by using only one parameter: the temperature.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Robust and tunable itinerant ferromagnetism at the silicon surface of the antiferromagnet GdRh2Si2.

M. Güttler; Alexander V. Generalov; M. M. Otrokov; Kurt Kummer; Kristin Kliemt; Alexander Fedorov; A. Chikina; S. Danzenbächer; S. Schulz; Evgenii Vladimirovich Chulkov; Yury M. Koroteev; N. Caroca-Canales; M. Shi; M. Radovic; Christoph Geibel; C. Laubschat; Pavel Dudin; T. K. Kim; M. Hoesch; C. Krellner; D. V. Vyalikh

Spin-polarized two-dimensional electron states (2DESs) at surfaces and interfaces of magnetically active materials attract immense interest because of the idea of exploiting fermion spins rather than charge in next generation electronics. Applying angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, we show that the silicon surface of GdRh2Si2 bears two distinct 2DESs, one being a Shockley surface state, and the other a Dirac surface resonance. Both are subject to strong exchange interaction with the ordered 4f-moments lying underneath the Si-Rh-Si trilayer. The spin degeneracy of the Shockley state breaks down below ~90 K, and the splitting of the resulting subbands saturates upon cooling at values as high as ~185 meV. The spin splitting of the Dirac state becomes clearly visible around ~60 K, reaching a maximum of ~70 meV. An abrupt increase of surface magnetization at around the same temperature suggests that the Dirac state contributes significantly to the magnetic properties at the Si surface. We also show the possibility to tune the properties of 2DESs by depositing alkali metal atoms. The unique temperature-dependent ferromagnetic properties of the Si-terminated surface in GdRh2Si2 could be exploited when combined with functional adlayers deposited on top for which novel phenomena related to magnetism can be anticipated.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Correlating structure and electronic band-edge properties in organolead halide perovskites nanoparticles.

Qiushi Zhu; Kaibo Zheng; Mohamed Abdellah; Alexander V. Generalov; Dörthe Haase; Stefan Carlson; Yuran Niu; Jimmy Heimdal; Anders Engdahl; Maria Messing; Tõnu Pullerits; Sophie E. Canton

After having emerged as primary contenders in the race for highly efficient optoelectronics materials, organolead halide perovskites (OHLP) are now being investigated in the nanoscale regime as promising building blocks with unique properties. For example, unlike their bulk counterpart, quantum dots of OHLP are brightly luminescent, owing to large exciton binding energies that cannot be rationalized solely on the basis of quantum confinement. Here, we establish the direct correlation between the structure and the electronic band-edge properties of CH3NH3PbBr3 nanoparticles. Complementary structural and spectroscopic measurements probing long-range and local order reveal that lattice strain influences the nature of the valence band and modifies the subtle stereochemical activity of the Pb(2+) lone-pair. More generally, this work demonstrates that the stereochemical activity of the lone-pair at the metal site is a specific physicochemical parameter coupled to composition, size and strain, which can be employed to engineer novel functionalities in OHLP nanomaterials.

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A. S. Vinogradov

Saint Petersburg State University

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D. V. Vyalikh

Saint Petersburg State University

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C. Laubschat

Dresden University of Technology

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A. Chikina

Dresden University of Technology

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M. Güttler

Dresden University of Technology

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