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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Wallner is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Wallner.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Cross‐Hyperconjugation: An Unexplored Orbital Interaction between π‐Conjugated and Saturated Molecular Segments

Rikard Emanuelsson; Andreas Wallner; Eugene A. M. Ng; Joshua R. Smith; Djawed Nauroozi; Sascha Ott; Henrik Ottosson

Crossing a barrier: Molecules with saturated ER2 units (E=C or Si, R=electron-releasing group) inserted between two π-conjugated segments have electronic and optical properties that resemble those ...


Langmuir | 2011

Formation and NMR Spectroscopy of ω-Thiol Protected α,ω-Alkanedithiol-Coated Gold Nanoparticles and Their Usage in Molecular Charge Transport Junctions

Andreas Wallner; S. Hassan M. Jafri; Tobias Blom; Adolf Gogoll; Klaus Leifer; Judith Baumgartner; Henrik Ottosson

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) coated with stabilizing molecular monolayers are utilized in areas ranging from life sciences to nanoelectronics. Here we present a novel and facile one-pot single phase procedure for the preparation of stable AuNPs with good dispersity, which are coated with α,ω-alkanedithiols whose outer ω-thiol is protected by a triphenylmethyl group. Using dielectrophoresis we were able to trap these AuNPs, coated with ω-thiol protecting groups, in a 20 nm gold electrode nanogap. The ω-thiol group was then deprotected under acidic conditions in situ once the AuNPs were correctly positioned in the device. The subsequent deprotection resulted in an increase of conductance by up to 3 orders of magnitude, indicating that the isolated dithiol-coated AuNPs were fused into a covalently bonded network with AuNP-molecule-AuNP as well as electrode-molecule-AuNP linkages. Furthermore, complete characterization of the AuNP surface-bonded alkanedithiols was achieved using a series of one- and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy techniques. Our spectra of the molecule-coated AuNPs show well-resolved signals, only slightly broader than for free molecules in solution, which is in contrast to many earlier reported NMR spectral data of molecules attached to AuNPs. Complementary diffusion NMR spectroscopic experiments were performed to prove that the observed alkanedithiols are definitely surface-bonded species and do not exist in free and unattached form.


Chemical Science | 2014

1,4-Disilacyclohexa-2,5-diene: a molecular building block that allows for remarkably strong neutral cyclic cross-hyperconjugation

Julius Tibbelin; Andreas Wallner; Rikard Emanuelsson; Filip Heijkenskjöld; Martin Rosenberg; Kaoru Yamazaki; Djawed Nauroozi; Leif Karlsson; Raimund Feifel; Roland Pettersson; Judith Baumgartner; Sascha Ott; Henrik Ottosson

2,3,5,6-Tetraethyl-1,4-disilacyclohexa-2,5-dienes with either four chloro (1a), methyl (1b), or trimethylsilyl (TMS) (1c) substituents at the two silicon atoms were examined in an effort to design rigid compounds with strong neutral cross-hyperconjugation between π- and σ-bonded molecular segments arranged into a cycle. Remarkable variations in the lowest electronic excitation energies, lowest ionization energies, and the first oxidation potentials were observed upon change of substituents, as determined by gas phase ultraviolet (UV) absorption spectroscopy, ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS), and cyclic voltammetry. A particularly strong neutral cyclic cross-hyperconjugation was observed in 1c. Its lowest electron binding energy (7.1 eV) is distinctly different from that of 1b (8.5 eV). Molecular orbital analysis reveals a stronger interaction between filled π(CC) and π(SiR2) group orbitals in 1c than in 1a and 1b. The energy shift in the highest occupied molecular orbital is also reflected in the first oxidation potentials as observed in the cyclic voltammograms of the respective compounds (1.47, 0.88, and 0.46 V for 1a, 1b and 1c, respectively). Furthermore, 1,4-disilacyclohexadiene 1c absorbs strongly at 273 nm (4.55 eV), whereas 1a and 1b have no symmetry allowed excitations above 215 nm (below 5.77 eV). Thus, suitably substituted 1,4-disilacyclohexa-2,5-dienes could represent novel building blocks for the design of larger cross-hyperconjugated molecules as alternatives to traditional purely cross-π-conjugated analogues, and could allow for design of molecules with properties that are not accessible to those that are exclusively π-conjugated.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Configuration- and Conformation-Dependent Electronic-Structure Variations in 1,4-Disubstituted Cyclohexanes Enabled by a Carbon-to-Silicon Exchange

Rikard Emanuelsson; Henrik Löfås; Andreas Wallner; Djawed Nauroozi; Judith Baumgartner; Christoph Marschner; Rajeev Ahuja; Sascha Ott; Anton Grigoriev; Henrik Ottosson

Cyclohexane, with its well-defined conformers, could be an ideal force-controlled molecular switch if it were to display substantial differences in electronic and optical properties between its conformers. We utilize σ conjugation in heavier analogues of cyclohexanes (i.e. cyclohexasilanes) and show that 1,4-disubstituted cyclohexasilanes display configuration- and conformation-dependent variations in these properties. Cis- and trans-1,4-bis(trimethylsilylethynyl)cyclohexasilanes display a 0.11 V difference in their oxidation potentials (computed 0.11 V) and a 0.34 eV difference in their lowest UV absorption (computed difference between first excitations 0.07 eV). This is in stark contrast to differences in the corresponding properties of analogous all-carbon cyclohexanes (computed 0.02 V and 0.03 eV, respectively). Moreover, the two chair conformers of the cyclohexasilane trans isomer display large differences in electronic-structure-related properties. This enables computational design of a mechanically force-controlled conductance switch with a calculated single-molecule ON/OFF ratio of 213 at zero-bias voltage.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Cooperative Gold Nanoparticle Stabilization by Acetylenic Phosphaalkenes

Andreas Orthaber; Henrik Löfås; Elisabet Öberg; Anton Grigoriev; Andreas Wallner; S. Hassan M. Jafri; Marie-Pierre Santoni; Rajeev Ahuja; Klaus Leifer; Henrik Ottosson; Sascha Ott

Acetylenic phosphaalkenes (APAs) are used as a novel type of ligands for the stabilization of gold nanoparticles (AuNP). As demonstrated by a variety of experimental and analytical methods, both structural features of the APA, that is, the P=C as well as the C≡C units are essential for NP stabilization. The presence of intact APAs on the AuNP is demonstrated by surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), and first principle calculations indicate that bonding occurs most likely at defect sites on the Au surface. AuNP-bound APAs are in chemical equilibrium with free APAs in solution, leading to a dynamic behavior that can be explored for facile place-exchange reactions with other types of anchor groups such as thiols or more weakly binding phosphine ligands.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Nano-fabrication of molecular electronic junctions by targeted modification of metal-molecule bonds

S. Hassan M. Jafri; Henrik Löfås; Tobias Blom; Andreas Wallner; Anton Grigoriev; Rajeev Ahuja; Henrik Ottosson; Klaus Leifer

Reproducibility, stability and the coupling between electrical and molecular properties are central challenges in the field of molecular electronics. The field not only needs devices that fulfill these criteria but they also need to be up-scalable to application size. In this work, few-molecule based electronics devices with reproducible electrical characteristics are demonstrated. Our previously reported 5 nm gold nanoparticles (AuNP) coated with ω-triphenylmethyl (trityl) protected 1,8-octanedithiol molecules are trapped in between sub-20 nm gap spacing gold nanoelectrodes forming AuNP-molecule network. When the trityl groups are removed, reproducible devices and stable Au-thiol junctions are established on both ends of the alkane segment. The resistance of more than 50 devices is reduced by orders of magnitude as well as a reduction of the spread in the resistance histogram is observed. By density functional theory calculations the orders of magnitude decrease in resistance can be explained and supported by TEM observations thus indicating that the resistance changes and strongly improved resistance spread are related to the establishment of reproducible and stable metal-molecule bonds. The same experimental sequence is carried out using 1,6-hexanedithiol functionalized AuNPs. The average resistances as a function of molecular length, demonstrated herein, are comparable to the one found in single molecule devices.


Organometallics | 2011

Conformational Control of Polysilanes: Use of CH2 Spacers in the Silicon Backbone

Andreas Wallner; Johann Hlina; Harald Wagner; Judith Baumgartner; Christoph Marschner

By the reaction of a number of oligosilyl potassium compounds with (trimethylsilyl)chloromethane, derivatives containing the (trimethylsilyl)methyl substituent were prepared. Using X-ray single-crystal structure analysis and UV spectroscopy the conformational properties of some of the compounds were studied. It was found that the (trimethylsilyl)methylated examples exhibit UV absorption properties which correspond to lower energy transitions in comparison to those of analogous trimethylsilylated molecules. The influence of this effect decreases, however, with increasing chain lengths.


Nanoscale | 2013

Identification of vibrational signatures from short chains of interlinked molecule–nanoparticle junctions obtained by inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy

S.H. M Jafri; Henrik Löfås; Jonas Fransson; Tobias Blom; Anton Grigoriev; Andreas Wallner; Rajeev Ahuja; Henrik Ottosson; Klaus Leifer

Short chains containing a series of metal-molecule-nanoparticle nanojunctions are a nano-material system with the potential to give electrical signatures close to those from single molecule experiments while enabling us to build portable devices on a chip. Inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy (IETS) measurements provide one of the most characteristic electrical signals of single and few molecules. In interlinked molecule-nanoparticle (NP) chains containing typically 5-7 molecules in a chain, the spectrum is expected to be a superposition of the vibrational signatures of individual molecules. We have established a stable and reproducible molecule-AuNP multi-junction by placing a few 1,8-octanedithiol (ODT) molecules onto a versatile and portable nanoparticle-nanoelectrode platform and measured for the first time vibrational molecular signatures at complex and coupled few-molecule-NP junctions. From quantum transport calculations, we model the IETS spectra and identify vibrational modes as well as the number of molecules contributing to the electron transport in the measured spectra.


Dalton Transactions | 2006

Structurally and conformationally defined small methyl polysilanes

Christoph Marschner; Judith Baumgartner; Andreas Wallner


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Molybdenum(VI) dioxo complexes with tridentate phenolate ligands.

Martina E. Judmaier; Andreas Wallner; Gregor N. Stipicic; Karl Kirchner; Judith Baumgartner; Ferdinand Belaj; Nadia C. Mösch-Zanetti

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Judith Baumgartner

Graz University of Technology

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Christoph Marschner

Graz University of Technology

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