Bogdan Diaconescu
University of New Hampshire
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Publication
Featured researches published by Bogdan Diaconescu.
Nature | 2007
Bogdan Diaconescu; Karsten Pohl; L. Vattuone; L. Savio; Philip Hofmann; V. M. Silkin; J. M. Pitarke; Eugene V. Chulkov; P. M. Echenique; Daniel Farías; M. Rocca
Nearly two-dimensional (2D) metallic systems formed in charge inversion layers and artificial layered materials permit the existence of low-energy collective excitations, called 2D plasmons, which are not found in a three-dimensional (3D) metal. These excitations have caused considerable interest because their low energy allows them to participate in many dynamical processes involving electrons and phonons, and because they might mediate the formation of Cooper pairs in high-transition-temperature superconductors. Metals often support electronic states that are confined to the surface, forming a nearly 2D electron-density layer. However, it was argued that these systems could not support low-energy collective excitations because they would be screened out by the underlying bulk electrons. Rather, metallic surfaces should support only conventional surface plasmons—higher-energy modes that depend only on the electron density. Surface plasmons have important applications in microscopy and sub-wavelength optics, but have no relevance to the low-energy dynamics. Here we show that, in contrast to expectations, a low-energy collective excitation mode can be found on bare metal surfaces. The mode has an acoustic (linear) dispersion, different to the dependence of a 2D plasmon, and was observed on Be(0001) using angle-resolved electron energy loss spectroscopy. First-principles calculations show that it is caused by the coexistence of a partially occupied quasi-2D surface-state band with the underlying 3D bulk electron continuum and also that the non-local character of the dielectric function prevents it from being screened out by the 3D states. The acoustic plasmon reported here has a very general character and should be present on many metal surfaces. Furthermore, its acoustic dispersion allows the confinement of light on small surface areas and in a broad frequency range, which is relevant for nano-optics and photonics applications.
Physical Review B | 2013
R. M. Feenstra; Nishtha Srivastava; Qin Gao; Michael Widom; Bogdan Diaconescu; Taisuke Ohta; G. L. Kellogg; Jeremy T. Robinson; Ivan Vlassiouk
Low-energy reflectivity of electrons from single- and multi-layer graphene is examined both theoretically and experimentally. A series of minima in the reflectivity over the energy range of 0 – 8 eV are found, with the number of minima depending on the number of graphene layers. Using first-principles computations, it is demonstrated that a free standing n-layer graphene slab produces 1 n reflectivity minima. This same result is also found experimentally for graphene supported on SiO2. For graphene bonded onto other substrates it is argued that a similar series of reflectivity minima is expected, although in certain cases an additional minimum occurs, at an energy that depends on the graphene-substrate separation and the effective potential in that space.
EPL | 2010
Karsten Pohl; Bogdan Diaconescu; G. Vercelli; L. Vattuone; Viatcheslav M. Silkin; Eugene V. Chulkov; P. M. Echenique; M. Rocca
Contrary to previous reports we show that the acoustic surface plasmon (ASP) exists also at noble-metal surfaces, thus demonstrating the generality of this phenomenon in the presence of partially filled Shockley surface states. Angle-resolved high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy measurements and calculations of the surface loss function indicate that for Cu(111) the ASP is a sharp feature up to a loss energy of about 0.4 eV. The dispersion is indeed linear (acoustic) with a slope (sound velocity) of (4.33±0.33) eVA in good agreement with recent theoretical predictions. The ASP can play important roles down to the meV regime, precluded to ordinary surface plasmons, for electron, phonon and adsorbate dynamics, as well as chemical reactions and advanced microscopies.
ACS Nano | 2014
Thomas E. Beechem; Taisuke Ohta; Bogdan Diaconescu; Jeremy T. Robinson
Conventional means of stacking two-dimensional (2D) crystals inevitably leads to imperfections. To examine the ramifications of these imperfections, rotational disorder and strain are quantified in twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) using a combination of Raman spectroscopic and low-energy electron diffraction imaging. The twist angle between TBG layers varies on the order of 2° within large (50-100 μm) single-crystalline grains, resulting in changes of the emergent Raman response by over an order of magnitude. Rotational disorder does not evolve continuously across the large grains but rather comes about by variations in the local twist angles between differing contiguous subgrains, ∼ 1 μm in size, that themselves exhibit virtually no twist angle variation (ΔΘ ∼ 0.1°). Owing to weak out-of-plane van der Waals bonding between azimuthally rotated graphene layers, these subgrains evolve in conjunction with the 0.3% strain variation observed both within and between the atomic layers. Importantly, the emergent Raman response is altered, but not removed, by these extrinsic perturbations. Interlayer interactions are therefore resilient to strain and rotational disorder, a fact that gives promise to the prospect of designer 2D solid heterostructures created via transfer processes.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2007
Bogdan Diaconescu; Georgi Nenchev; Juan de la Figuera; Karsten Pohl
We describe the design and performance of a fast-scanning, variable temperature scanning tunneling microscope (STM) operating from 80 to 700 K in ultrahigh vacuum (UHV), which routinely achieves large scale atomically resolved imaging of compact metallic surfaces. An efficient in-vacuum vibration isolation and cryogenic system allows for no external vibration isolation of the UHV chamber. The design of the sample holder and STM head permits imaging of the same nanometer-size area of the sample before and after sample preparation outside the STM base. Refractory metal samples are frequently annealed up to 2000 K and their cooldown time from room temperature to 80 K is 15 min. The vertical resolution of the instrument was found to be about 2 pm at room temperature. The coarse motor design allows both translation and rotation of the scanner tube. The total scanning area is about 8 x 8 microm(2). The sample temperature can be adjusted by a few tens of degrees while scanning over the same sample area.
ACS Nano | 2011
Jun Wang; Irvinder Kaur; Bogdan Diaconescu; Jian-Ming Tang; Glen P. Miller; Karsten Pohl
Defining pathways to assemble long-range-ordered 2D nanostructures of specifically designed organic molecules is required in order to optimize the performance of organic thin-film electronic devices. We report on the rapid fabrication of a nearly perfect self-assembled monolayer (SAM) composed of a single-domain 6,13-dichloropentacene (DCP) brick-wall pattern on Au(788). Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) results show the well-ordered DCP SAM extends over hundreds of nanometers. Combining STM results with insights from density functional theory, we propose that a combination of unique intermolecular and molecule-step interactions drives the DCP SAM formation.
Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2008
Viatcheslav M. Silkin; J. M. Pitarke; Eugene V. Chulkov; Bogdan Diaconescu; Karsten Pohl; L. Vattuone; L. Savio; Ph. Hofmann; Daniel Farías; M. Rocca; P. M. Echenique
We report first-principles calculations of acoustic surface plasmons on the (0001) surface of Be, as obtained in the randomphase approximation of many-body theory. The energy dispersion of these collective excitations has been obtained along two symmetry directions. Our results show a considerable anisotropy of acoustic surface plasmons, and underline the capability of experimental measurements of these plasmons to map the electron-hole excitation spectrum of the two-dimensional Shockley surface state band that is present on the Be(0001) surface.
Physical Review B | 2009
Georgi Nenchev; Bogdan Diaconescu; Frank Hagelberg; Karsten Pohl
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Bogdan Diaconescu; Teng Yang; Savas Berber; Mikael Jazdzyk; Glen P. Miller; David Tománek; Karsten Pohl
Diamond and Related Materials | 2016
Jeremy Kintigh; Bogdan Diaconescu; Yolanda Echegoyen; Karsten Pohl; Glen P. Miller