Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez.
Nature | 2008
Gonzalo Otero; Giulio Biddau; Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Renaud Caillard; María Francisca López; Celia Rogero; F. Javier Palomares; Noemí Cabello; Miguel A. Basanta; José Eugenio Ortega; Javier Méndez; Antonio M. Echavarren; Rubén Pérez; Berta Gómez-Lor; José A. Martín-Gago
Graphite vaporization provides an uncontrolled yet efficient means of producing fullerene molecules. However, some fullerene derivatives or unusual fullerene species might only be accessible through rational and controlled synthesis methods. Recently, such an approach has been used to produce isolable amounts of the fullerene C60 from commercially available starting materials. But the overall process required 11 steps to generate a suitable polycyclic aromatic precursor molecule, which was then dehydrogenated in the gas phase with a yield of only about one per cent. Here we report the formation of C60 and the triazafullerene C57N3 from aromatic precursors using a highly efficient surface-catalysed cyclodehydrogenation process. We find that after deposition onto a platinum (111) surface and heating to 750 K, the precursors are transformed into the corresponding fullerene and triazafullerene molecules with about 100 per cent yield. We expect that this approach will allow the production of a range of other fullerenes and heterofullerenes, once suitable precursors are available. Also, if the process is carried out in an atmosphere containing guest species, it might even allow the encapsulation of atoms or small molecules to form endohedral fullerenes.
ACS Nano | 2013
Anna L. Pinardi; Gonzalo Otero-Irurueta; Irene Palacio; José I. Martínez; Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Marta Tello; Celia Rogero; Albano Cossaro; Alexei Preobrajenski; Berta Gómez-Lor; Andrej Jancarik; Irena G. Stará; Ivo Starý; M. Francisca López; Javier Méndez; José A. Martín-Gago
Surface-assisted cyclodehydrogenation and dehydrogenative polymerization of polycyclic (hetero)aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) are among the most important strategies for bottom-up assembly of new nanostructures from their molecular building blocks. Although diverse compounds have been formed in recent years using this methodology, a limited knowledge on the molecular machinery operating at the nanoscale has prevented a rational control of the reaction outcome. We show that the strength of the PAH-substrate interaction rules the competitive reaction pathways (cyclodehydrogenation versus dehydrogenative polymerization). By controlling the diffusion of N-heteroaromatic precursors, the on-surface dehydrogenation can lead to monomolecular triazafullerenes and diazahexabenzocoronenes (N-doped nanographene), to N-doped oligomeric or polymeric networks, or to carbonaceous monolayers. Governing the on-surface dehydrogenation process is a step forward toward the tailored fabrication of molecular 2D nanoarchitectures distinct from graphene and exhibiting new properties of fundamental and technological interest.
Nanotechnology | 2010
Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Cristina González; Pavel Jelínek; J. Mendez; P. L. de Andres; J. A. Martín-Gago; María Francisca López
We present a combination of experimental STM images and DFT calculations to understand the atomic scale contrast of features found in high-resolution STM images. Simulating different plausible structural models for the tip, we have been able to reproduce various characteristics previously reported in experimental images on TiO(2)(110)-(1 x 1) under controlled UHV conditions. Our results allow us to determine the influence of different chemical and morphological tip terminations on the atomic-resolution STM images of the TiO(2)(110)-(1 x 1) surface. The commonest images have been properly explained using standard models for a W tip, either clean or with a single O atom located at the apex. Furthermore, a double transfer of oxygen atoms can account for different types of bizarre atomic-resolution features occasionally seen, and not conclusively interpreted before. Importantly, we discuss how typical point-defects are imaged on this surface by different tips, namely bridging O vacancies and adsorbed OH groups.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012
Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Valeria Lanzilotto; Carlos Villaseca González; Alberto Verdini; Pedro L. de Andrés; Luca Floreano; María Francisca López; José A. Martín-Gago
The adsorption of C(60), a typical acceptor organic molecule, on a TiO(2) (110) surface has been investigated by a multitechnique combination, including van der Waals density functional calculations. It is shown that the adsorbed molecules form a weakly interacting molecular layer, which sits on the fivefold-coordinated Ti that is confined between the prominent bridging oxygen rows (see figure).
Surface Science | 2013
Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Michael Bernard Gunnar Garnier; Philipp Aebi; M. Blanco-Rey; P. L. de Andres; J. A. Martín-Gago; María Francisca López
Nanoscale | 2013
Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; José I. Martínez; Valeria Lanzilotto; Giulio Biddau; Berta Gómez-Lor; Rubén Pérez; Luca Floreano; María Francisca López; José A. Martín-Gago
Chemical Science | 2018
Carlos Cruz; Irene R. Márquez; Inês F. A. Mariz; Víctor Blanco; Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Jesús Manuel Sobrado; José A. Martín-Gago; Juan M. Cuerva; Ermelinda M. S. Maçôas; Araceli G. Campaña
Surface Science | 2013
Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; José A. Martín-Gago; María Francisca López
Vacuum | 2011
José Abad; Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; P. Vilmercati; A. Goldoni; María Francisca López; José A. Martín-Gago
Archive | 2016
José I. Martínez; Luca Floreano; F. Flores; José Ortega; Michael Gottfried; Robert A. Bartynski; Carlos Sánchez-Sánchez; Javier Méndez; María Francisca López; José A. Martín-Gago