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Dive into the research topics where Aran Garcia-Lekue is active.

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Featured researches published by Aran Garcia-Lekue.


ACS Nano | 2016

Substrate-Independent Growth of Atomically Precise Chiral Graphene Nanoribbons

Dimas G. de Oteyza; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Néstor Merino-Díez; Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Martina Corso; Guillaume Vasseur; Celia Rogero; Enrique Guitián; J. I. Pascual; J. Enrique Ortega; Yutaka Wakayama; Diego Peña

Contributing to the need for new graphene nanoribbon (GNR) structures that can be synthesized with atomic precision, we have designed a reactant that renders chiral (3,1)-GNRs after a multistep reaction including Ullmann coupling and cyclodehydrogenation. The nanoribbon synthesis has been successfully proven on different coinage metals, and the formation process, together with the fingerprints associated with each reaction step, has been studied by combining scanning tunneling microscopy, core-level spectroscopy, and density functional calculations. In addition to the GNR’s chiral edge structure, the substantial GNR lengths achieved and the low processing temperature required to complete the reaction grant this reactant extremely interesting properties for potential applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

High-Level Correlated Approach to the Jellium Surface Energy, without Uniform-Gas Input

Lucian A. Constantin; J. M. Pitarke; John Francis Dobson; Aran Garcia-Lekue; John P. Perdew

We resolve the long-standing controversy over the metal surface energy: Density-functional methods that require uniform-electron-gas input agree with each other, but not with high-level correlated calculations such as Fermi hypernetted chain and diffusion Monte Carlo calculations that predict the uniform-gas correlation energy. Here we apply the inhomogeneous Singwi-Tosi-Land-Sjölander method, and find that the density functionals are indeed reliable (because the surface energy is bulklike). Our work also vindicates the use of uniform-gas-based nonlocal kernels in time-dependent density-functional theory.


Nano Letters | 2010

Surveying molecular vibrations during the formation of metal−molecule nanocontacts

Lucia Vitali; Robin Ohmann; Klaus Kern; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Thomas Frederiksen; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; A. Arnau

Molecular junctions have been characterized to determine the influence of the metal contact formation in the electron transport process through a single molecule. With inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy and first-principles calculations, the vibration modes of a carbon monoxide molecule have been surveyed as a function of the distance from a copper electrode with unprecedented accuracy. We observe a continuous but nonlinear blue shift of the frustrated rotation mode in tunneling with decreasing distance followed by an abrupt softening upon contact formation. This indicates that the presence of the metal electrode sensibly alters the structural and conductive properties of the junction even without the formation of a strong chemical bond.


Nano Letters | 2017

Quantum Dots Embedded in Graphene Nanoribbons by Chemical Substitution

Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Pedro Brandimarte; Richard Balog; Martina Corso; Shigeki Kawai; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Shohei Saito; Shigehiro Yamaguchi; Ernst Meyer; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; J. I. Pascual

Bottom-up chemical reactions of selected molecular precursors on a gold surface can produce high quality graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). Here, we report on the formation of quantum dots embedded in an armchair GNR by substitutional inclusion of pairs of boron atoms into the GNR backbone. The boron inclusion is achieved through the addition of a small amount of boron substituted precursors during the formation of pristine GNRs. In the pristine region between two boron pairs, the nanoribbons show a discretization of their valence band into confined modes compatible with a Fabry-Perot resonator. Transport simulations of the scattering properties of the boron pairs reveal that they selectively confine the first valence band of the pristine ribbon while allowing an efficient electron transmission of the second one. Such band-dependent electron scattering stems from the symmetry matching between the electronic wave functions of the states from the pristine nanoribbons and those localized at the boron pairs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Π Band Dispersion along Conjugated Organic Nanowires Synthesized on a Metal Oxide Semiconductor

Guillaume Vasseur; Mikel Abadia; Luis A. Miccio; Jens Brede; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Dimas G. de Oteyza; Celia Rogero; Jorge Lobo-Checa; J. Enrique Ortega

Surface-confined dehalogenation reactions are versatile bottom-up approaches for the synthesis of carbon-based nanostructures with predefined chemical properties. However, for devices generally requiring low-conductivity substrates, potential applications are so far severely hampered by the necessity of a metallic surface to catalyze the reactions. In this work we report the synthesis of ordered arrays of poly(p-phenylene) chains on the surface of semiconducting TiO2(110) via a dehalogenative homocoupling of 4,4″-dibromoterphenyl precursors. The supramolecular phase is clearly distinguished from the polymeric one using low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy as the substrate temperature used for deposition is varied. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy of C 1s and Br 3d core levels traces the temperature of the onset of dehalogenation to around 475 K. Moreover, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and tight-binding calculations identify a highly dispersive band characteristic of a substantial overlap between the precursor’s π states along the polymer, considered as the fingerprint of a successful polymerization. Thus, these results establish the first spectroscopic evidence that atomically precise carbon-based nanostructures can readily be synthesized on top of a transition-metal oxide surface, opening the prospect for the bottom-up production of novel molecule–semiconductor devices.


Physical Review B | 2011

Simulation of inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy of single molecules with functionalized tips

Aran Garcia-Lekue; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; A. Arnau; Thomas Frederiksen

The role of the tip in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (IETS) performed with scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) is theoretically addressed via first-principles simulations of vibrational spectra of single carbon monoxide (CO) molecules adsorbed on Cu(111). We show how chemically functionalized STM tips modify the IETS intensity corresponding to adsorbate modes on the sample side. The underlying propensity rules are explained using symmetry considerations for both the vibrational modes and the molecular orbitals of the tip and sample. This suggests that single-molecule IETS can be optimized by selecting the appropriate tip orbital symmetry.


Science | 2018

Bottom-up synthesis of multifunctional nanoporous graphene

César Moreno; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Bernhard Kretz; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Marius V. Costache; Markos Paradinas; Mirko Panighel; Gustavo Ceballos; Sergio O. Valenzuela; Diego Peña; Aitor Mugarza

Synthesizing graphene nanopores Nanosize pores in graphene can make its electronic properties more favorable for transistor applications and may also be useful for molecular separations. Moreno et al. used Ullmann coupling to polymerize a dibromo-substituted diphenylbianthracene on a gold surface (see the Perspective by Sinitskii). Cyclodehydrogenation of the resulting polymer produced graphene nanoribbons, and cross-coupling of these structures created a nanoporous graphene sheet with pore sizes of about 1 nanometer. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy revealed an electronic structure in which semiconductor bands with an energy gap of 1 electron volt coexist with localized states created by the pores. Science, this issue p. 199; see also p. 154 Graphene nanoribbons are synthesized on a gold surface and interconnected to create a well-defined pore network. Nanosize pores can turn semimetallic graphene into a semiconductor and, from being impermeable, into the most efficient molecular-sieve membrane. However, scaling the pores down to the nanometer, while fulfilling the tight structural constraints imposed by applications, represents an enormous challenge for present top-down strategies. Here we report a bottom-up method to synthesize nanoporous graphene comprising an ordered array of pores separated by ribbons, which can be tuned down to the 1-nanometer range. The size, density, morphology, and chemical composition of the pores are defined with atomic precision by the design of the molecular precursors. Our electronic characterization further reveals a highly anisotropic electronic structure, where orthogonal one-dimensional electronic bands with an energy gap of ∼1 electron volt coexist with confined pore states, making the nanoporous graphene a highly versatile semiconductor for simultaneous sieving and electrical sensing of molecular species.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Tunneling spectroscopy of close-spaced dangling-bond pairs in Si(001):H

Mads Engelund; Rafal Zuzak; Szymon Godlewski; Marek Kolmer; Thomas Frederiksen; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; Marek Szymonski

We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the electronic properties of close-spaced dangling-bond (DB) pairs in a hydrogen-passivated Si(001):H p-doped surface. Two types of DB pairs are considered, called “cross” and “line” structures. Our scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) data show that, although the spectra taken over different DBs in each pair exhibit a remarkable resemblance, they appear shifted by a constant energy that depends on the DB-pair type. This spontaneous asymmetry persists after repeated STS measurements. By comparison with density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we demonstrate that the magnitude of this shift and the relative position of the STS peaks can be explained by distinct charge states for each DB in the pair. We also explain how the charge state is modified by the presence of the scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) tip and the applied bias. Our results indicate that, using the STM tip, it is possible to control the charge state of individual DBs in complex structures, even if they are in close proximity. This observation might have important consequences for the design of electronic circuits and logic gates based on DBs in passivated silicon surfaces.


Nano Letters | 2018

On-Surface Route for Producing Planar Nanographenes with Azulene Moieties

Jeremy Hieulle; Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Enrique Guitián; Diego Peña; J. I. Pascual

Large aromatic carbon nanostructures are cornerstone materials due to their increasingly active role in functional devices, but their synthesis in solution encounters size and shape limitations. New on-surface strategies facilitate the synthesis of large and insoluble planar systems with atomic-scale precision. While dehydrogenation is usually the chemical zipping reaction building up large aromatic carbon structures, mostly benzenoid structures are being produced. Here, we report on a new cyclodehydrogenation reaction transforming a sterically stressed precursor with conjoined cove regions into a planar carbon platform by incorporating azulene moieties in their interior. Submolecular resolution STM is used to characterize this exotic large polycyclic aromatic compound on Au(111) yielding unprecedented insight into a dehydrogenative intramolecular aryl-aryl coupling reaction. The resulting polycyclic aromatic carbon structure shows a [18]annulene core hosting peculiar pore states confined at the carbon cavity.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Submolecular Resolution by Variation of the Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy Amplitude and its Relation to the AFM/STM Signal

Bruno de la Torre; Martin Švec; Giuseppe Foti; Ondřej Krejčí; Prokop Hapala; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Thomas Frederiksen; Radek Zbořil; A. Arnau; Héctor Vázquez; Pavel Jelínek

Bruno de la Torre,1, 2, ∗ Martin Švec,1, 2 Giuseppe Foti,1 Ondřej Krejč́ı,1, 3 Prokop Hapala,1 Aran Garcia-Lekue,4, 5 Thomas Frederiksen,4, 5 Radek Zbořil,2 Andres Arnau,4 Héctor Vázquez,1 and Pavel Jeĺınek1, 2, 4, † 1Institute of Physics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, v.v.i., Cukrovarnická 10, 162 00 Prague, Czech Republic 2Regional Centre of Advanced Technologies and Materials, Palacký University, Olomouc, Czech Republic. 3Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Department of Surface and Plasma Science, V Holešovičkách 2, 180 00, Prague, Czech Republic 4Donostia International Physics Center (DIPC), Paseo Manuel Lardizabal 4, E-20018 San Sebastian, Spain 5Ikerbasque, Basque Foundation for Science, 48013 Bilbao, Spain

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Daniel Sánchez-Portal

Spanish National Research Council

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Thomas Frederiksen

Donostia International Physics Center

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A. Arnau

University of the Basque Country

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Celia Rogero

Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial

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Mads Engelund

Spanish National Research Council

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Pedro Brandimarte

Spanish National Research Council

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Dimas G. de Oteyza

Donostia International Physics Center

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J. Enrique Ortega

Spanish National Research Council

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Rubén González-Moreno

Spanish National Research Council

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