Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alexey Y. Ganin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alexey Y. Ganin.


Science | 2010

An Adaptable Peptide-Based Porous Material

Jeremy Rabone; Y.-F. Yue; Samantha Y. Chong; Kyriakos C. Stylianou; John Bacsa; Darren Bradshaw; George R. Darling; Neil G. Berry; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Alexey Y. Ganin; Paul V. Wiper; John B. Claridge; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

Swelling Pores Porosity is a key parameter when selecting materials for catalysts, chemical separations, gas storage, host-guest interactions, and related chemical processes. In most cases the porosity of a material is fixed. Rabone et al. (p. 1053; see the Perspective by Wright) have described a molecular material in which the size of the pores changed during the sorption process. The porosity increased because a dipeptide linker between metal centers reoriented during uptake of some gases, thus improving the capacity of the material to adsorb. Conformational changes in a porous material during the sorption of small molecules lead to a dynamic increase in porosity. Porous materials find widespread application in storage, separation, and catalytic technologies. We report a crystalline porous solid with adaptable porosity, in which a simple dipeptide linker is arranged in a regular array by coordination to metal centers. Experiments reinforced by molecular dynamics simulations showed that low-energy torsions and displacements of the peptides enabled the available pore volume to evolve smoothly from zero as the guest loading increased. The observed cooperative feedback in sorption isotherms resembled the response of proteins undergoing conformational selection, suggesting an energy landscape similar to that required for protein folding. The flexible peptide linker was shown to play the pivotal role in changing the pore conformation.


Nature Materials | 2008

Bulk superconductivity at 38 K in a molecular system

Alexey Y. Ganin; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Serena Margadonna; Anna Tamai; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Kosmas Prassides

C(60)-based solids are archetypal molecular superconductors with transition temperatures (Tc) as high as 33 K (refs 2-4). Tc of face-centred-cubic (f.c.c.) A(3)C(60) (A=alkali metal) increases monotonically with inter C(60) separation, which is controlled by the A(+) cation size. As Cs(+) is the largest such ion, Cs(3)C(60) is a key material in this family. Previous studies revealing trace superconductivity in Cs(x)C(60) materials have not identified the structure or composition of the superconducting phase owing to extremely small shielding fractions and low crystallinity. Here, we show that superconducting Cs(3)C(60) can be reproducibly isolated by solvent-controlled synthesis and has the highest Tc of any molecular material at 38 K. In contrast to other A(3)C(60) materials, two distinct cubic Cs(3)C(60) structures are accessible. Although f.c.c. Cs(3)C(60) can be synthesized, the superconducting phase has the A15 structure based uniquely among fullerides on body-centred-cubic packing. Application of hydrostatic pressure controllably tunes A15 Cs(3)C(60) from insulating at ambient pressure to superconducting without crystal structure change and reveals a broad maximum in Tc at approximately 7 kbar. We attribute the observed Tc maximum as a function of inter C(60)separation--unprecedented in fullerides but reminiscent of the atom-based cuprate superconductors--to the role of strong electronic correlations near the metal-insulator transition onset.


Science | 2009

The disorder-free non-BCS superconductor Cs3C60 emerges from an antiferromagnetic insulator parent state.

Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Alexey Y. Ganin; P. Jeglič; Denis Arčon; T. Takano; Yoshihiro Iwasa; Yasuo Ohishi; Masaki Takata; Nao Takeshita; Kosmas Prassides; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

The body-centered cubic A15-structured cesium fulleride Cs3C60 is not superconducting at ambient pressure and is free from disorder, unlike the well-studied face-centered cubic A3C60 alkali metal fulleride superconductors. We found that in Cs3C60, where the molecular valences are precisely assigned, the superconducting state at 38 kelvin emerges directly from a localized electron antiferromagnetic insulating state with the application of pressure. This transition maintains the threefold degeneracy of the active orbitals in both competing electronic states; it is thus a purely electronic transition to a superconducting state, with a dependence of the transition temperature on pressure-induced changes of anion packing density that is not explicable by Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory.


Nature | 2010

Polymorphism control of superconductivity and magnetism in Cs3C60 close to the Mott transition

Alexey Y. Ganin; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; P. Jeglič; Denis Arčon; Anton Potočnik; P. J. Baker; Yasuo Ohishi; Martin T. McDonald; Manolis D. Tzirakis; Alec McLennan; George R. Darling; Masaki Takata; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Kosnnas Prassides

The crystal structure of a solid controls the interactions between the electronically active units and thus its electronic properties. In the high-temperature superconducting copper oxides, only one spatial arrangement of the electronically active Cu2+ units—a two-dimensional square lattice—is available to study the competition between the cooperative electronic states of magnetic order and superconductivity. Crystals of the spherical molecular C603- anion support both superconductivity and magnetism but can consist of fundamentally distinct three-dimensional arrangements of the anions. Superconductivity in the A3C60 (A = alkali metal) fullerides has been exclusively associated with face-centred cubic (f.c.c.) packing of C603- (refs 2, 3), but recently the most expanded (and thus having the highest superconducting transition temperature, Tc; ref. 4) composition Cs3C60 has been isolated as a body-centred cubic (b.c.c.) packing, which supports both superconductivity and magnetic order. Here we isolate the f.c.c. polymorph of Cs3C60 to show how the spatial arrangement of the electronically active units controls the competing superconducting and magnetic electronic ground states. Unlike all the other f.c.c. A3C60 fullerides, f.c.c. Cs3C60 is not a superconductor but a magnetic insulator at ambient pressure, and becomes superconducting under pressure. The magnetic ordering occurs at an order of magnitude lower temperature in the geometrically frustrated f.c.c. polymorph (Néel temperature TN = 2.2 K) than in the b.c.c.-based packing (TN = 46 K). The different lattice packings of C603- change Tc from 38 K in b.c.c. Cs3C60 to 35 K in f.c.c. Cs3C60 (the highest found in the f.c.c. A3C60 family). The existence of two superconducting packings of the same electronically active unit reveals that Tc scales universally in a structure-independent dome-like relationship with proximity to the Mott metal–insulator transition, which is governed by the role of electron correlations characteristic of high-temperature superconducting materials other than fullerides.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Strong Electron Correlations in the Normal State of the Iron-Based FeSe0.42Te0.58 Superconductor Observed by Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy

Anna Tamai; Alexey Y. Ganin; E. Rozbicki; John Bacsa; W. Meevasana; P. D. C. King; M. Caffio; Renald Schaub; Serena Margadonna; Kosmas Prassides; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; F. Baumberger

A. Tamai, A.Y. Ganin, E. Rozbicki, J. Bacsa, W. Meevasana, P.D.C. King, M. Caffio, R. Schaub, S. Margadonna, K. Prassides, M.J. Rosseinsky, and F. Baumberger School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9SS, United Kingdom Department of Chemistry, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZD, United Kingdom School of Chemistry, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9ST, United Kingdom School of Chemistry, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JJ, United Kingdom Department of Chemistry, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom (Dated: February 10, 2010)


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Control of Porosity Geometry in Amino Acid Derived Nanoporous Materials

Jorge Perez Barrio; Jean‐Noël Rebilly; Benjamin O. Carter; Darren Bradshaw; John Bacsa; Alexey Y. Ganin; Hyunsoo Park; Abbie Trewin; Ramanathan Vaidhyanathan; Andrew I. Cooper; John E. Warren; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

Substitution of the pillaring ligand in the homochiral open-framework [Ni(2)(L-asp)(2)(bipy)] by extended bipy-type ligands leads to a family of layer-structured, homochiral metal-organic frameworks. The 1D channel topology can be modified by the nature of the organic linker, with shape, cross-section and the chemical functionality tuneable. In addition, the volume of these channels can be increased by up to 36 % compared to the parent [Ni(2)(L-asp)(2)(bipy)]. The linker 1,4-dipyridylbenzene (3rbp) gives access to a new layered homochiral framework [Ni(2)(L-asp)(2)(3rbp)] with channels of a different shape. In specific cases, non-porous analogues with the linker also present as a guest can be activated to give porous materials after sublimation. Their CO(2) uptake shows an increase of up to 30 % with respect to the parent [Ni(2)(L-asp)(2)(bipy)] framework.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Structural phase transitions and superconductivity in Fe(1+delta)Se0.57Te0.43 at ambient and elevated pressures.

Nathalie C. Gresty; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Alexey Y. Ganin; Martin T. McDonald; John B. Claridge; Duong V. Giap; Yoshikazu Mizuguchi; Yoshihiko Takano; Tomoko Kagayama; Yasuo Ohishi; Masaki Takata; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Serena Margadonna; Kosmas Prassides

The ternary iron chalcogenide, Fe(1.03)Se(0.57)Te(0.43) is a member of the recently discovered family of Fe-based superconductors with an ambient pressure T(c) of 13.9 K and a simple structure comprising layers of edge-sharing distorted Fe(Se/Te)(4) tetrahedra separated by a van der Waals gap. Here we study the relationship between its structural and electronic responses to the application of pressure. T(c) depends sensitively on applied pressure attaining a broad maximum of 23.3 K at approximately 3 GPa. Further compression to 12 GPa leads to a metallic but nonsuperconducting ground state. High-resolution synchrotron X-ray diffraction shows that the superconducting phase is metrically orthorhombic at ambient pressure but pressurization to approximately 3 GPa leads to a structural transformation to a more distorted structure with monoclinic symmetry. The exact coincidence of the crystal symmetry crossover pressure with that at which T(c) is maximum reveals an intimate link between crystal and electronic structures of the iron chalcogenide superconductors.


Chemical Science | 2011

Cation vacancy order in the K0.8+xFe1.6−ySe2 system: Five-fold cell expansion accommodates 20% tetrahedral vacancies

John Bacsa; Alexey Y. Ganin; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; K. E. Christensen; Kosmas Prassides; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; John B. Claridge

Ordering of the tetrahedral site vacancies in two crystals of refined compositions K0.93(1)Fe1.52(1)Se2 and K0.862(3)Fe1.563(4)Se2 produces a fivefold expansion of the parent ThCr2Si2 unit cell in the ab plane which can accommodate 20% vacancies on a single site within the square FeSe layer. The iron charge state is maintained close to +2 by coupling of the level of alkali metal and iron vacancies, producing a potential doping mechanism which can operate at both average and local structure levels.


Science Advances | 2015

Optimized unconventional superconductivity in a molecular Jahn-Teller metal.

Ruth H. Zadik; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Gyoengyi Klupp; Ross H. Colman; Alexey Y. Ganin; Anton Potočnik; P. Jeglič; Denis Arčon; Péter Matus; Katalin Kamarás; Yuichi Kasahara; Yoshihiro Iwasa; Andrew N. Fitch; Yasuo Ohishi; Gaston Garbarino; Kenichi Kato; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Kosmas Prassides

A superconductivity dome is created by the electronic structure of the molecular building block of an unconventional superconductor. Understanding the relationship between the superconducting, the neighboring insulating, and the normal metallic state above Tc is a major challenge for all unconventional superconductors. The molecular A3C60 fulleride superconductors have a parent antiferromagnetic insulator in common with the atom-based cuprates, but here, the C603– electronic structure controls the geometry and spin state of the structural building unit via the on-molecule Jahn-Teller effect. We identify the Jahn-Teller metal as a fluctuating microscopically heterogeneous coexistence of both localized Jahn-Teller–active and itinerant electrons that connects the insulating and superconducting states of fullerides. The balance between these molecular and extended lattice features of the electrons at the Fermi level gives a dome-shaped variation of Tc with interfulleride separation, demonstrating molecular electronic structure control of superconductivity.


Chemical Science | 2014

Jahn-Teller orbital glass state in the expanded fcc Cs3C60 fulleride

Anton Potočnik; Alexey Y. Ganin; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Martin T. McDonald; Ivo Heinmaa; P. Jeglič; Raivo Stern; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Kosmas Prassides; Denis Arčon

The most expanded fcc-structured alkali fulleride, Cs3C60, is a Mott insulator at ambient pressure because of the weak overlap between the frontier t1u molecular orbitals of the C603− anions. It has a severely disordered antiferromagnetic ground state that becomes a superconductor with a high critical temperature, Tc of 35 K upon compression. The effect of the localised t1u3 electronic configuration on the properties of the material is not well-understood. Here we study the relationship between the intrinsic crystallographic C603− orientational disorder and the molecular Jahn–Teller (JT) effect dynamics in the Mott insulating state. The high-resolution 13C magic-angle-spinning (MAS) NMR spectrum at room temperature comprises three peaks in the intensity ratio 1:2:2 consistent with the presence of three crystallographically-inequivalent carbon sites in the fcc unit cell and revealing that the JT-effect dynamics are fast on the NMR time-scale of 10−5 s despite the presence of the frozen-in C603− merohedral disorder disclosed by the 133Cs MAS NMR fine splitting of the tetrahedral and octahedral 133Cs resonances. Cooling to sub-liquid-nitrogen temperatures leads to severe broadening of both the 13C and 133Cs MAS NMR multiplets, which provides the signature of an increased number of inequivalent 13C and 133Cs sites. This is attributed to the freezing out of the C603− JT dynamics and the development of a t1u electronic orbital glass state guided by the merohedral disorder of the fcc structure. The observation of the dynamic and static JT effect in the Mott insulating state of the metrically cubic but merohedrally disordered Cs3C60 fulleride in different temperature ranges reveals the intimate relation between charge localization, magnetic ground state, lifting of electronic degeneracy, and orientational disorder in these strongly-correlated systems.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alexey Y. Ganin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Denis Arčon

University of Ljubljana

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. Jeglič

University of Ljubljana

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge