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Featured researches published by Andrea Basagni.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Molecules–Oligomers–Nanowires–Graphene Nanoribbons: A Bottom-Up Stepwise On-Surface Covalent Synthesis Preserving Long-Range Order

Andrea Basagni; Francesco Sedona; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Mattia Cattelan; Louis Nicolas; Maurizio Casarin; Mauro Sambi

We report on a stepwise on-surface polymerization reaction leading to oriented graphene nanoribbons on Au(111) as the final product. Starting from the precursor 4,4″-dibromo-p-terphenyl and using the Ullmann coupling reaction followed by dehydrogenation and C-C coupling, we have developed a fine-tuned, annealing-triggered on-surface polymerization that allows us to obtain an oriented nanomesh of graphene nanoribbons via two well-defined intermediate products, namely, p-phenylene oligomers with reduced length dispersion and ordered submicrometric molecular wires of poly(p-phenylene). A fine balance involving gold catalytic activity in the Ullmann coupling, appropriate on-surface molecular mobility, and favorable topochemical conditions provided by the used precursor leads to a high degree of long-range order that characterizes each step of the synthesis and is rarely observed for surface organic frameworks obtained via Ullmann coupling.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Stereoselective Photopolymerization of Tetraphenylporphyrin Derivatives on Ag(110) at the Sub-Monolayer Level

Andrea Basagni; Luciano Colazzo; Francesco Sedona; Marco DiMarino; Tommaso Carofiglio; Elisa Lubian; Daniel Forrer; Andrea Vittadini; Maurizio Casarin; Alberto Verdini; Albano Cossaro; Luca Floreano; Mauro Sambi

We explore a photochemical approach to achieve an ordered polymeric structure at the sub-monolayer level on a metal substrate. In particular, a tetraphenylporphyrin derivative carrying para-amino-phenyl functional groups is used to obtain extended and highly ordered molecular wires on Ag(110). Scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory calculations reveal that porphyrin building blocks are joined through azo bridges, mainly as cis isomers. The observed highly stereoselective growth is the result of adsorbate/surface interactions, as indicated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. At variance with previous studies, we tailor the formation of long-range ordered structures by the separate control of the surface molecular diffusion through sample heating, and of the reaction initiation through light absorption. This previously unreported approach shows that the photo-induced covalent stabilization of self-assembled molecular monolayers to obtain highly ordered surface covalent organic frameworks is viable by a careful choice of the precursors and reaction conditions.


ACS Nano | 2016

Tunable Band Alignment with Unperturbed Carrier Mobility of On-Surface Synthesized Organic Semiconducting Wires

Andrea Basagni; Guillaume Vasseur; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Diego Peña; Louis Nicolas; Lucia Vitali; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Dimas G. de Oteyza; Francesco Sedona; Maurizio Casarin; J. Enrique Ortega; Mauro Sambi

The tunable properties of molecular materials place them among the favorites for a variety of future generation devices. In addition, to maintain the current trend of miniaturization of those devices, a departure from the present top-down production methods may soon be required and self-assembly appears among the most promising alternatives. On-surface synthesis unites the promises of molecular materials and of self-assembly, with the sturdiness of covalently bonded structures: an ideal scenario for future applications. Following this idea, we report the synthesis of functional extended nanowires by self-assembly. In particular, the products correspond to one-dimensional organic semiconductors. The uniaxial alignment provided by our substrate templates allows us to access with exquisite detail their electronic properties, including the full valence band dispersion, by combining local probes with spatial averaging techniques. We show how, by selectively doping the molecular precursors, the product’s energy level alignment can be tuned without compromising the charge carrier’s mobility.


Chemical Communications | 2015

On-surface photo-dissociation of C–Br bonds: towards room temperature Ullmann coupling

Andrea Basagni; Lara Ferrighi; Mattia Cattelan; Louis Nicolas; Karsten Handrup; Luca Vaghi; Antonio Papagni; Francesco Sedona; Cristiana Di Valentin; Stefano Agnoli; Mauro Sambi

The surface-assisted synthesis of gold-organometallic hybrids on the Au(111) surface both by thermo- and light-initiated dehalogenation of bromo-substituted tetracene is reported. Combined X-ray photoemission (XPS) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) data reveal a significant increase of the surface order when mild reaction conditions are combined with 405 nm light irradiation.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Control of the Intermolecular Coupling of Dibromotetracene on Cu(110) by the Sequential Activation of CBr and CH Bonds

Lara Ferrighi; Igor Píš; Thanh Hai Nguyen; Mattia Cattelan; Silvia Nappini; Andrea Basagni; Matteo Parravicini; Antonio Papagni; Francesco Sedona; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; Cristiana Di Valentin; Stefano Agnoli

Dibromotetracene molecules are deposited on the Cu(110) surface at room temperature. The complex evolution of this system has been monitored at different temperatures (i.e., 298, 523, 673, and 723 K) by means of a variety of complementary techniques that range from STM and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) to high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy (XPS) and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (NEXAFS). State-of-the-art density-functional calculations were used to determine the chemical processes that take place on the surface. After deposition at room temperature, the organic molecules are transformed into organometallic monomers through debromination and carbon-radical binding to copper adatoms. Organometallic dimers, trimers, or small oligomers, which present copper-bridged molecules, are formed by increasing the temperature. Surprisingly, further heating to 673 K causes the formation of elongated chains along the Cu(110) close-packed rows as a consequence of radical-site migration to the thermodynamically more stable molecule heads. Finally, massive dehydrogenation occurs at the highest temperature followed by ring condensation to nanographenic patches. This study is a paradigmatic example of how intermolecular coupling can be modulated by the stepwise control of a simple parameter, such as temperature, through a sequence of domino reactions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Surface-Confined Polymerization of Halogenated Polyacenes: The Case of Dibromotetracene on Ag(110)

Igor Píš; Lara Ferrighi; Thanh Hai Nguyen; Silvia Nappini; Luca Vaghi; Andrea Basagni; Elena Magnano; Antonio Papagni; Francesco Sedona; Cristiana Di Valentin; Stefano Agnoli; Federica Bondino


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Structurally Tunable Self-Assembled 2D Cocrystals of C60 and Porphyrins on the Ag (110) Surface

Francesco Sedona; Marco Di Marino; Andrea Basagni; Luciano Colazzo; Mauro Sambi


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Reversible Fe Magnetic Moment Switching in Catalytic Oxygen Reduction Reaction of Fe-Phthalocyanine Adsorbed on Ag(110)

J. Bartolomé; F. Bartolomé; Nicholas B. Brookes; Francesco Sedona; Andrea Basagni; Daniel Forrer; Mauro Sambi


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Switching from Reactant to Substrate Engineering in the Selective Synthesis of Graphene Nanoribbons

Néstor Merino-Díez; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Pawel Nita; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Andrea Basagni; Guillaume Vasseur; Federica Tiso; Francesco Sedona; Pranab Kumar Das; J. Fujii; I. Vobornik; Mauro Sambi; J. I. Pascual; J. Enrique Ortega; Dimas G. de Oteyza


Chemical Communications | 2018

Substrate involvement in dioxygen bond dissociation catalysed by iron phthalocyanine supported on Ag(100)

Francesco Sedona; Matteo Lo Cicero; Silvia Carlotto; Andrea Basagni; Mir Masoud Seyyed Fakhrabadi; Maurizio Casarin; Mauro Sambi

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