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Dive into the research topics where Bernd Büchner is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernd Büchner.


ACS Nano | 2010

Direct low-temperature nanographene CVD synthesis over a dielectric insulator

Mark H. Rümmeli; Alicja Bachmatiuk; Andrew M. Scott; Felix Börrnert; Jamie H. Warner; Volker Hoffman; Jarrn-Horng Lin; Gianaurelio Cuniberti; Bernd Büchner

Graphene ranks highly as a possible material for future high-speed and flexible electronics. Current fabrication routes, which rely on metal substrates, require post-synthesis transfer of the graphene onto a Si wafer, or in the case of epitaxial growth on SiC, temperatures above 1000 degrees C are required. Both the handling difficulty and high temperatures are not best suited to present day silicon technology. We report a facile chemical vapor deposition approach in which nanographene and few-layer nanographene are directly formed over magnesium oxide and can be achieved at temperatures as low as 325 degrees C.


ACS Nano | 2010

Atomic resolution imaging and topography of boron nitride sheets produced by chemical exfoliation.

Jamie H. Warner; Mark H. Rümmeli; Alicja Bachmatiuk; Bernd Büchner

Here, we present a simple method for preparing thin few-layer sheets of hexagonal BN with micrometer-sized dimensions using chemical exfoliation in the solvent 1,2-dichloroethane. The atomic structure of both few-layer and monolayer BN sheets is directly imaged using aberration-corrected high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. Electron beam induced sputtering effects are examined in real time. The removal of layers of BN by electron beam irradiation leads to the exposure of a step edge between a monolayer and bilayer region. We use HRTEM imaging combined with image simulations to show that BN bilayers can have AB stacking and are not limited to just AA stacking.


Nano Letters | 2010

Tunable Band Gap in Hydrogenated Quasi-Free-Standing Graphene

D. Haberer; D. V. Vyalikh; S. Taioli; Balázs Dóra; Mani Farjam; J. Fink; D. Marchenko; T. Pichler; K. Ziegler; Stefano Simonucci; Mildred S. Dresselhaus; M. Knupfer; Bernd Büchner; A. Grüneis

We show by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy that a tunable gap in quasi-free-standing monolayer graphene on Au can be induced by hydrogenation. The size of the gap can be controlled via hydrogen loading and reaches approximately 1.0 eV for a hydrogen coverage of 8%. The local rehybridization from sp(2) to sp(3) in the chemical bonding is observed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption and allows for a determination of the amount of chemisorbed hydrogen. The hydrogen induced gap formation is completely reversible by annealing without damaging the graphene. Calculations of the hydrogen loading dependent core level binding energies and the spectral function of graphene are in excellent agreement with photoemission experiments. Hydrogenation of graphene gives access to tunable electronic and optical properties and thereby provides a model system to study hydrogen storage in carbon materials.


Nature Materials | 2009

The electronic phase diagram of the LaO1|[minus]|xFxFeAs superconductor

H. Luetkens; H.-H. Klauss; M. Kraken; F. J. Litterst; T. Dellmann; R. Klingeler; Christian Hess; R. Khasanov; A. Amato; C. Baines; M. Kosmala; O. J. Schumann; M. Braden; J. Hamann-Borrero; N. Leps; A. Kondrat; G. Behr; J. Werner; Bernd Büchner

The competition of magnetic order and superconductivity is a key element in the physics of all unconventional superconductors, for example in high-transition-temperature cuprates, heavy fermions and organic superconductors. Here superconductivity is often found close to a quantum critical point where long-range antiferromagnetic order is gradually suppressed as a function of a control parameter, for example charge-carrier doping or pressure. It is believed that dynamic spin fluctuations associated with this quantum critical behaviour are crucial for the mechanism of superconductivity. Recently, high-temperature superconductivity has been discovered in iron pnictides, providing a new class of unconventional superconductors. Similar to other unconventional superconductors, the parent compounds of the pnictides show a magnetic ground state and superconductivity is induced on charge-carrier doping. In this Letter the structural and electronic phase diagram is investigated by means of X-ray scattering, muon spin relaxation and Mössbauer spectroscopy on the series LaO(1-x)F(x)FeAs. We find a discontinuous first-order-like change of the Néel temperature, the superconducting transition temperature and the respective order parameters. Our results strongly question the relevance of quantum critical behaviour in iron pnictides and prove a strong coupling of the structural orthorhombic distortion and the magnetic order both disappearing at the phase boundary to the superconducting state.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Structural transformations in graphene studied with high spatial and temporal resolution.

Jamie H. Warner; Mark H. Rümmeli; Ling Ge; Thomas Gemming; B. Montanari; N. M. Harrison; Bernd Büchner; G. Andrew D. Briggs

Graphene has remarkable electronic properties, such as ballistic transport and quantum Hall effects, and has also been used as a support for samples in high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and as a transparent electrode in photovoltaic devices. There is now a demand for techniques that can manipulate the structural and physical properties of graphene, in conjunction with the facility to monitor the changes in situ with atomic precision. Here, we show that irradiation with an 80 kV electron beam can selectively remove monolayers in few-layer graphene sheets by means of electron-beam-induced sputtering. Aberration-corrected, low-voltage, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy with sub-ångström resolution is used to examine the structural reconstruction occurring at the single atomic level. We find preferential termination for graphene layers along the zigzag orientation for large hole sizes. The temporal resolution can also be reduced to 80 ms, enabling real-time observation of the reconstruction of carbon atoms during the sputtering process. We also report electron-beam-induced rapid displacement of monolayers, fast elastic distortions and flexible bending at the edges of graphene sheets. These results reveal how energy transfer from the electron beam to few-layer graphene sheets leads to unique structural transformations.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2008

Carbon nanotubes filled with a chemotherapeutic agent: a nanocarrier mediates inhibition of tumor cell growth

Silke Hampel; Doreen Kunze; Diana Haase; Kai Krämer; Mandy Rauschenbach; Manfred Ritschel; Albrecht Leonhardt; Jürgen Thomas; Steffen Oswald; Volker Hoffmann; Bernd Büchner

AIM In this paper, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are presented as feasible carriers for carboplatin, a therapeutic agent for cancer treatment. The drug was introduced into CNTs to demonstrate that they are suited as nanocontainers and nanocarriers and can release the drug to initialize its medical virtue. METHOD The filling was accomplished by a wet-chemical approach after the CNTs were opened. The effect on cell proliferation and cytotoxicity of the carboplatin-filled CNT was investigated by using a viability assays. RESULTS Using different analysis methods such as electron energy loss spectroscopy and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy the structure of carboplatin incorporated into the CNTs was found to be retained. In vitro studies showed that carboplatin-filled CNTs inhibited growth of bladder cancer cells whereas unfilled, opened CNTs barely affected cancer cell growth. CONCLUSION A reversible filling-emptying process could be performed successfully within this work. This highlights the potential of CNTs for applications in the field of drug delivery.


Nano Letters | 2009

Direct imaging of rotational stacking faults in few layer graphene.

Jamie H. Warner; Mark H. Rümmeli; Thomas Gemming; Bernd Büchner; G. Andrew D. Briggs

Few layer graphene nanostructures are directly imaged using aberration corrected high-resolution transmission electron microscopy with an electron accelerating voltage of 80 kV. We observe rotational stacking faults in the HRTEM images of 2-6 layers of graphene sheets, giving rise to Moir patterns. By filtering in the frequency domain using a Fourier transform, we reconstruct the graphene lattice of each sheet and determine the packing structure and relative orientations of up to six separate sets. Direct evidence is obtained for few layer graphene sheets with packing that is different to the standard AB Bernal packing of bulk graphite. This has implications toward bilayer and few layer graphene electronic devices and the determination of their intrinsic structure.


Nature Communications | 2013

A high-mobility two-dimensional electron gas at the spinel/perovskite interface of γ-Al2O3/SrTiO3.

Yunzhong Chen; N. Bovet; Felix Trier; Dennis Valbjørn Christensen; F.M. Qu; Niels Hessel Andersen; Takeshi Kasama; Wei Zhang; R. Giraud; J. Dufouleur; T. S. Jespersen; J. R. Sun; Anders Smith; Jesper Nygård; L. Lu; Bernd Büchner; B. G. Shen; Søren Linderoth; Nini Pryds

The discovery of two-dimensional electron gases at the heterointerface between two insulating perovskite-type oxides, such as LaAlO(3) and SrTiO(3), provides opportunities for a new generation of all-oxide electronic devices. Key challenges remain for achieving interfacial electron mobilities much beyond the current value of approximately 1,000 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) (at low temperatures). Here we create a new type of two-dimensional electron gas at the heterointerface between SrTiO(3) and a spinel γ-Al(2)O(3) epitaxial film with compatible oxygen ions sublattices. Electron mobilities more than one order of magnitude higher than those of hitherto-investigated perovskite-type interfaces are obtained. The spinel/perovskite two-dimensional electron gas, where the two-dimensional conduction character is revealed by quantum magnetoresistance oscillations, is found to result from interface-stabilized oxygen vacancies confined within a layer of 0.9 nm in proximity to the interface. Our findings pave the way for studies of mesoscopic physics with complex oxides and design of high-mobility all-oxide electronic devices.


Nano Letters | 2010

Graphene Synthesis on Cubic SiC/Si Wafers. Perspectives for Mass Production of Graphene-Based Electronic Devices

Victor Yu. Aristov; Grzegorz Urbanik; Kurt Kummer; D. V. Vyalikh; O. V. Molodtsova; Alexei Preobrajenski; Alexei Zakharov; Christian Hess; Torben Hänke; Bernd Büchner; I. Vobornik; J. Fujii; G. Panaccione; Yuri A. Ossipyan; M. Knupfer

The outstanding properties of graphene, a single graphite layer, render it a top candidate for substituting silicon in future electronic devices. The so far exploited synthesis approaches, however, require conditions typically achieved in specialized laboratories and result in graphene sheets whose electronic properties are often altered by interactions with substrate materials. The development of graphene-based technologies requires an economical fabrication method compatible with mass production. Here we demonstrate for the fist time the feasibility of graphene synthesis on commercially available cubic SiC/Si substrates of >300 mm in diameter, which result in graphene flakes electronically decoupled from the substrate. After optimization of the preparation procedure, the proposed synthesis method can represent a further big step toward graphene-based electronic technologies.


Nature Physics | 2009

Strength of the spin-fluctuation-mediated pairing interaction in a high-temperature superconductor

Thomas Dahm; V. Hinkov; S. V. Borisenko; A. A. Kordyuk; V. B. Zabolotnyy; J. Fink; Bernd Büchner; D. J. Scalapino; W. Hanke; B. Keimer

Although spin fluctuations are believed to have an important role in the mechanism responsible for high-temperature superconductivity, it has been unclear whether the strength of their coupling with fermionic quasiparticles is sufficiently strong. Systematic analysis of angle-resolved photoemission and neutron spectra suggests it is. Theories based on the coupling between spin fluctuations and fermionic quasiparticles are among the leading contenders to explain the origin of high-temperature superconductivity, but estimates of the strength of this interaction differ widely1. Here, we analyse the charge- and spin-excitation spectra determined by angle-resolved photoemission and inelastic neutron scattering, respectively, on the same crystals of the high-temperature superconductor YBa2Cu3O6.6. We show that a self-consistent description of both spectra can be obtained by adjusting a single parameter, the spin–fermion coupling constant. In particular, we find a quantitative link between two spectral features that have been established as universal for the cuprates, namely high-energy spin excitations2,3,4,5,6,7 and ‘kinks’ in the fermionic band dispersions along the nodal direction8,9,10,11,12. The superconducting transition temperature computed with this coupling constant exceeds 150 K, demonstrating that spin fluctuations have sufficient strength to mediate high-temperature superconductivity.

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S. Wurmehl

Dresden University of Technology

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V. Kataev

University of Cologne

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Alicja Bachmatiuk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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