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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Stadtmüller is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Stadtmüller.


Nature Communications | 2015

Topological states on the gold surface

Binghai Yan; Benjamin Stadtmüller; Norman Haag; S. Jakobs; Johannes Seidel; Dominik Jungkenn; Stefan Mathias; Mirko Cinchetti; Martin Aeschlimann; Claudia Felser

Gold surfaces host special electronic states that have been understood as a prototype of Shockley surface states. These surface states are commonly employed to benchmark the capability of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and scanning tunnelling spectroscopy. Here we show that these Shockley surface states can be reinterpreted as topologically derived surface states (TDSSs) of a topological insulator (TI), a recently discovered quantum state. Based on band structure calculations, the Z2-type invariants of gold can be well-defined to characterize a TI. Further, our ARPES measurement validates TDSSs by detecting the dispersion of unoccupied surface states. The same TDSSs are also recognized on surfaces of other well-known noble metals (for example, silver, copper, platinum and palladium), which shines a new light on these long-known surface states.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Submonolayer growth of copper-phthalocyanine on Ag(111)

Ingo Kröger; Benjamin Stadtmüller; Christoph Stadler; Johannes Ziroff; Mario Kochler; Andreas Stahl; Florian Pollinger; Tien-Lin Lee; J. Zegenhagen; F. Reinert; Christian Kumpf

The growth of high-quality thin films is a key issue in the ability to design electronic devices based on organic materials and to tune their properties. In this context, the interfaces between metals and organic films play a decisive role. Here, we report on the interface formation between copper-phthalocyanine (CuPc) and an Ag(111) surface using various complementary methods. High-resolution low-energy electron diffraction revealed a rich phase diagram for this system with disordered (two-dimensional (2D)-gas-like) and ordered structures (commensurate and point-on-line). In particular, a continuous change in lattice parameters with increasing coverage was found for long-range ordered structures, indicating a substrate-mediated repulsive intermolecular interaction similar to the case of tin-phthalocyanine/Ag(111). Chemisorptive bonding to the substrate was found by x-ray standing waves and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, and this weakened with increasing coverage at low temperature. This remarkable effect is correlated to a shift in the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and a HOMO-1 split off band to higher binding energies. Based on our experimental results, we present a comprehensive study of the adsorption behavior of CuPc/Ag(111), including the mechanisms for phase formation and molecular interaction.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Approaching Truly Freestanding Graphene: The Structure of Hydrogen-Intercalated Graphene on 6H-SiC(0001)

J. Sforzini; Lydia Nemec; T. Denig; Benjamin Stadtmüller; T.-L. Lee; Christian Kumpf; Serguei Soubatch; U. Starke; Patrick Rinke; Volker Blum; F. C. Bocquet; F. S. Tautz

We measure the adsorption height of hydrogen-intercalated quasifreestanding monolayer graphene on the (0001) face of 6H silicon carbide by the normal incidence x-ray standing wave technique. A density functional calculation for the full (6√3×6√3)-R30° unit cell, based on a van der Waals corrected exchange correlation functional, finds a purely physisorptive adsorption height in excellent agreement with experiments, a very low buckling of the graphene layer, a very homogeneous electron density at the interface, and the lowest known adsorption energy per atom for graphene on any substrate. A structural comparison to other graphenes suggests that hydrogen-intercalated graphene on 6H-SiC(0001) approaches ideal graphene.


Nature Communications | 2014

Unexpected interplay of bonding height and energy level alignment at heteromolecular hybrid interfaces

Benjamin Stadtmüller; Daniel Lüftner; Martin Willenbockel; Eva Maria Reinisch; Tomoki Sueyoshi; Georg Koller; Serguei Soubatch; M.G. Ramsey; Peter Puschnig; F. Stefan Tautz; Christian Kumpf

Although geometric and electronic properties of any physical or chemical system are always mutually coupled by the rules of quantum mechanics, counterintuitive coincidences between the two are sometimes observed. The coadsorption of the organic molecules 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride and copper-II-phthalocyanine on Ag(111) represents such a case, since geometric and electronic structures appear to be decoupled: one molecule moves away from the substrate while its electronic structure indicates a stronger chemical interaction, and vice versa for the other. Our comprehensive experimental and ab-initio theoretical study reveals that, mediated by the metal surface, both species mutually amplify their charge-donating and -accepting characters, respectively. This resolves the apparent paradox, and demonstrates with exceptional clarity how geometric and electronic bonding parameters are intertwined at metal-organic interfaces.


EPL | 2012

Orbital tomography for highly symmetric adsorbate systems

Benjamin Stadtmüller; Martin Willenbockel; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; François C. Bocquet; Serguei Soubatch; Peter Puschnig; Georg Koller; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz; Christian Kumpf

Orbital tomography is a new and very powerful tool to analyze the angular distribution of a photoemission spectroscopy experiment. It was successfully used for organic adsorbate systems to identify (and consequently deconvolute) the contributions of specific molecular orbitals to the photoemission data. The technique was so far limited to surfaces with low symmetry like fcc(110) oriented surfaces, owing to the small number of rotational domains that occur on such surfaces. In this letter we overcome this limitation and present an orbital tomography study of a 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetra-carboxylic-dianhydride (PTCDA) monolayer film adsorbed on Ag(111). Although this system exhibits twelve differently oriented molecules, the angular resolved photoemission data still allow a meaningful analysis of the different local density of states and reveal different electronic structures for symmetrically inequivalent molecules. We also discuss the precision of the orbital tomography technique in terms of counting statistics and linear regression fitting algorithm. Our results demonstrate that orbital tomography is not limited to low-symmetry surfaces, a finding which makes a broad field of complex adsorbate systems accessible to this powerful technique.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Energy offsets within a molecular monolayer: the influence of the molecular environment

Martin Willenbockel; Benjamin Stadtmüller; K. Schönauer; François C. Bocquet; Daniel Lüftner; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; Georg Koller; Christian Kumpf; Serguei Soubatch; Peter Puschnig; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz

The compressed 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) herringbone monolayer structure on Ag(110) is used as a model system to investigate the role of molecule–molecule interactions at metal–organic interfaces. By means of the orbital tomography technique, we can not only distinguish the two inequivalent molecules in the unit cell but also resolve their different energy positions for the highest occupied and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals. Density functional theory calculations of a freestanding PTCDA layer identify the electrostatic interaction between neighboring molecules, rather than the adsorption site, as the main reason for the molecular level splitting observed experimentally.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Modeling intermolecular interactions of physisorbed organic molecules using pair potential calculations.

Ingo Kröger; Benjamin Stadtmüller; Christian Wagner; Christian Weiss; Ruslan Temirov; F. Stefan Tautz; Christian Kumpf

The understanding and control of epitaxial growth of organic thin films is of crucial importance in order to optimize the performance of future electronic devices. In particular, the start of the submonolayer growth plays an important role since it often determines the structure of the first layer and subsequently of the entire molecular film. We have investigated the structure formation of 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetracarboxylic dianhydride and copper-phthalocyanine molecules on Au(111) using pair-potential calculations based on van der Waals and electrostatic intermolecular interactions. The results are compared with the fundamental lateral structures known from experiment and an excellent agreement was found for these weakly interacting systems. Furthermore, the calculations are even suitable for chemisorptive adsorption as demonstrated for copper-phthalocyanine/Cu(111), if the influence of charge transfer between substrate and molecules is known and the corresponding charge redistribution in the molecules can be estimated. The calculations are of general applicability for molecular adsorbate systems which are dominated by electrostatic and van der Waals interaction.


Nano Letters | 2015

Controlling the Spin Texture of Topological Insulators by Rational Design of Organic Molecules

S. Jakobs; Awadhesh Narayan; Benjamin Stadtmüller; Andrea Droghetti; Ivan Rungger; Yew San Hor; Svetlana Klyatskaya; Dominik Jungkenn; Johannes Stöckl; Martin Laux; Oliver L. A. Monti; Martin Aeschlimann; R. J. Cava; Mario Ruben; Stefan Mathias; Stefano Sanvito; Mirko Cinchetti

We present a rational design approach to customize the spin texture of surface states of a topological insulator. This approach relies on the extreme multifunctionality of organic molecules that are used to functionalize the surface of the prototypical topological insulator (TI) Bi2Se3. For the rational design we use theoretical calculations to guide the choice and chemical synthesis of appropriate molecules that customize the spin texture of Bi2Se3. The theoretical predictions are then verified in angular-resolved photoemission experiments. We show that, by tuning the strength of molecule-TI interaction, the surface of the TI can be passivated, the Dirac point can energetically be shifted at will, and Rashba-split quantum-well interface states can be created. These tailored interface properties-passivation, spin-texture tuning, and creation of hybrid interface states-lay a solid foundation for interface-assisted molecular spintronics in spin-textured materials.


Nature Communications | 2016

Dynamic spin filtering at the Co/Alq3 interface mediated by weakly coupled second layer molecules.

Andrea Droghetti; Philip Thielen; Ivan Rungger; Norman Haag; Nicolas Großmann; Johannes Stöckl; Benjamin Stadtmüller; Martin Aeschlimann; Stefano Sanvito; Mirko Cinchetti

Spin filtering at organic-metal interfaces is often determined by the details of the interaction between the organic molecules and the inorganic magnets used as electrodes. Here we demonstrate a spin-filtering mechanism based on the dynamical spin relaxation of the long-living interface states formed by the magnet and weakly physisorbed molecules. We investigate the case of Alq3 on Co and, by combining two-photon photoemission experiments with electronic structure theory, show that the observed long-time spin-dependent electron dynamics is driven by molecules in the second organic layer. The interface states formed by physisorbed molecules are not spin-split, but acquire a spin-dependent lifetime, that is the result of dynamical spin-relaxation driven by the interaction with the Co substrate. Such spin-filtering mechanism has an important role in the injection of spin-polarized carriers across the interface and their successive hopping diffusion into successive molecular layers of molecular spintronics devices.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Tailoring metal–organic hybrid interfaces: heteromolecular structures with varying stoichiometry on Ag(111)

Benjamin Stadtmüller; Caroline Henneke; Serguei Soubatch; F. Stefan Tautz; Christian Kumpf

The physical properties of interfaces between organic semiconductors and metal surfaces crucially influence the performance of organic electronic devices. In order to enable the tailoring of such metal–organic hybrid interfaces we study the adsorption of heteromolecular thin films containing the prototypical molecules copper-II-phthalocyanine (CuPc) and 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetra-carboxylic-dianhydride (PTCDA) on the Ag(111) surface. Here, we demonstrate how the lateral order can be tuned by changing the relative coverage of both adsorbates on the surface. The layer growth has been studied in real time with low energy electron microscopy, and—for different stoichiometries—the geometric properties of three heteromolecular submonolayer phases have been investigated using high resolution low energy electron diffraction and low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy. Furthermore, we have used a theoretical approach based on van der Waals and electrostatic potentials in order to reveal the influence of the intermolecular and the molecule–substrate interactions on the lateral order of heteromolecular films.

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Christian Kumpf

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Martin Aeschlimann

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Mirko Cinchetti

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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F. S. Tautz

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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F. Stefan Tautz

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Johannes Stöckl

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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Norman Haag

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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