David Cornil
University of Mons
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by David Cornil.
Advanced Materials | 2013
Núria Crivillers; Silvio Osella; Colin Van Dyck; G. M. Lazzerini; David Cornil; Andrea Liscio; Shabbir M. Mian; Oliver Fenwick; Federica Reinders; Markus Neuburger; Emanuele Treossi; Marcel Mayor; Vincenzo Palermo; Franco Cacialli; Jérôme Cornil; Paolo Samorì
Tune it with light! Self-assembled monolayers on gold based on a chemisorbed novel azobenzene derivative with a perfluorinated terminal phenyl ring are prepared. The modified substrate shows a significant work function increase compared to the bare metal. The photo-conversion between trans and cis isomers chemisorbed on the surface shows great perspectives for being an accessible route to tune the gold properties by means of light.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011
Núria Crivillers; Andrea Liscio; F. Di Stasio; C. Van Dyck; Silvio Osella; David Cornil; S. Mian; G. M. Lazzerini; Oliver Fenwick; Emanuele Orgiu; Federica Reinders; Slawomir Braun; Mats Fahlman; Marcel Mayor; Jérôme Cornil; Vincenzo Palermo; Franco Cacialli; Paolo Samorì
Responsive monolayers are key building blocks for future applications in organic and molecular electronics in particular because they hold potential for tuning the physico-chemical properties of interfaces, including their energetics. Here we study a photochromic SAM based on a conjugated azobenzene derivative and its influence on the gold work function (Φ(Au)) when chemisorbed on its surface. In particular we show that the Φ(Au) can be modulated with external stimuli by controlling the azobenzene trans/cis isomerization process. This phenomenon is characterized experimentally by four different techniques, kelvin probe, kelvin probe force microscopy, electroabsorption spectroscopy and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. The use of different techniques implies exposing the SAM to different measurement conditions and different preparation methods, which, remarkably, do not alter the observed work function change (Φ(trans)-Φ(cis)). Theoretical calculations provided a complementary insight crucial to attain a deeper knowledge on the origin of the work function photo-modulation.
Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2015
Olivier James Fenwick; Colin Van Dyck; Kathiresan Murugavel; David Cornil; Federica Reinders; Sébastien Haar; Marcel Mayor; Jérôme Cornil; Paolo Samorì
The rapid increase in charge carrier mobility in organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) in the past few years, with a number of reports >10 cm2 V−1 s−1, calls for a simultaneous improvement in charge injection at the electrode–semiconductor interface. Chemical modification of the electrodes with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) allows the optimization of three key properties for lowering the contact resistance, thus fine-tuning the charge injection into OFET channels: the electrode work function, the surface energy of the modified electrodes and tunnelling resistance of the SAM. Understanding of the interplay of these properties is of vital importance for organic device design. In this paper, we report a model study based on the modulation of all three of these properties via chemisorption of fluorinated mono- or biphenylthiol molecules (PFBT and PF2BT, respectively) onto gold electrodes. Density functional theory simulations confirm the higher work function of the PFBT monolayers compared to PF2BT and provide evidence that this work function difference is entirely due to differences in the bond dipole to the gold surface. This observation is of importance for the development of future SAM molecules both for organic electronics and across the field of surface chemistry. Incorporation of these SAM-modified Au surfaces as the source and drain electrodes of an OFET with prototypical polymer semiconductors exhibiting different transport levels makes it possible to unravel the role of energetic alignment as well as surface energy and tunnelling resistance on the device performance. Interestingly, our results show that it is not always the high work function PFBT-modified electrodes that give the lowest contact resistance.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008
Pascal Gerbaux; Julien De Winter; David Cornil; Katia Ravicini; Gaëlle Pesesse; Jérôme Cornil; Robert Flammang
Chiral recognition of enantiomers by host compounds is one of the most challenging topics in modern host-guest chemistry. Amongst the well-established methods, mass spectrometry (MS) is increasingly used nowadays, due to its low detection limit, short analysis time, and suitability for analyzing mixtures and for studying chiral effects in the gas phase. The development of electrospray-ionization (ESI) techniques provides an invaluable tool to study, in the gas phase, diastereoisomeric complex ions prepared from enantiomer ions and a chiral selector. This paper reports on an ESIMS and ESIMSMS study of the molecular mechanisms that intervene in the chiral-recognition phenomena observed between amino acids and a chiral crown ether. The modified crown ether, namely (+)-([18]crown-6)-2,3,11,12-tetracarboxylic acid, is used as the chiral selector when covalently bound on a stationary phase in liquid chromatography. This study was stimulated by the fact that, except with threonine and proline, consistent elution orders were observed, which indicates that the D enantiomers interact more strongly with the chiral selector than the L enantiomers. For proline, the lack of a primary amino group is likely to be responsible for the nonresolution of the two forms, whereas the second stereogenic center on threonine could explain the reversed elution order. In light of those observations, we performed mass spectrometry experiments to understand more deeply the enantiomeric recognition phenomena, both in solution by the enantiomer-labeled guest method and in the gas phase by gas-phase ligand-exchange ion/molecule reactions. The results have been further supported by quantum chemical calculations. One of the most interesting features of this work is the identification of a nonspecific interaction between proline and the crown ether upon ESIMS analysis.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
David Cornil; Hugues Wiame; Benoit Lecomte; Jérôme Cornil; David Beljonne
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed to assess the work of adhesion of silver layers deposited on metal oxide surfaces differing by their chemical nature (ZnO, TiO2, SnO2, and ZrO2) and their crystallographic face. The calculated work of adhesion values range from ∼0 to 3 J m-2 and are shown to originate from the interplay between ionic (associated with charge transfer at the interface) and covalent (as probed by atomic bond orders between silver and the metal oxide atoms) interactions. The results are discussed in the context of the design of silver/metal oxide interfaces for low-emissivity glasses.
Advanced Functional Materials | 2007
David Cornil; Yoann Olivier; Victor Geskin; Jérôme Cornil
Chemical Communications | 2013
Tatyana Balandina; Maarten W. van der Meijden; Oleksandr Ivasenko; David Cornil; Jérôme Cornil; Roberto Lazzaroni; Richard M. Kellogg; Steven De Feyter
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014
Silvio Osella; David Cornil; Jérôme Cornil
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014
David Cornil; T. Van Regemorter; David Beljonne; Jérôme Cornil
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena | 2013
David Cornil; Jérôme Cornil