Frank Schramm
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Frank Schramm.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2009
Frank Schramm; Velimir Meded; Heike Fliegl; Karin Fink; Olaf Fuhr; Z. Qu; Wim Klopper; Stephen Finn; Tia E. Keyes; Mario Ruben
A mononuclear ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complex with an enlarged terpyridyl coordination cage was synthesized by the formal introduction of a carbon bridge between the coordinating pyridine rings. Structurally, the ruthenium(II) complex shows an almost perfect octahedral N6 coordination around the central Ru(II) metal ion. The investigation of the photophysical properties reveals a triplet metal-to-ligand charge transfer emission with an unprecedented quantum yield of 13% and a lifetime of 1.36 mus at room temperature and in the presence of air oxygen. An exceptional small energy gap between light absorption and light emission, or Stokes shift, was detected. Additionally, time-dependent density functional theory calculations were carried out in order to characterize the ground state and both the singlet and triplet excited states. The exceptional properties of the new compound open the perspective of exploiting terpyridyl-like ruthenium complexes in photochemical devices under ambient conditions.
Dalton Transactions | 2011
Rodrigo González-Prieto; Benoit Fleury; Frank Schramm; Giorgio Zoppellaro; Rajadurai Chandrasekar; Olaf Fuhr; Sergei Lebedkin; Manfred M. Kappes; Mario Ruben
Two 2,6-bispyrazolylpyridine ligands (bpp) were functionalized with pyrene moieties through linkers of different lengths. In the ligand 2,6-di(1H-pyrazol-1-yl)-4-(pyren-1-yl)pyridine (L1) the pyrene group is directly connected to the bpp moiety via a C-C single bond, while in the ligand 4-(2,6-di(1H-pyrazol-1-yl)pyridin-4-yl)benzyl-4-(pyren-1-yl)butanoate (L2) it is separated by a benzyl ester group involving a flexible butanoic chain. Subsequent complexation of Fe(II) salts revealed dramatic the influence of the nature of the pyrene substitution on the spin-transition behaviour of the resulting complexes. Thus, compound [Fe(L1)(2)](ClO(4))(2) (1) is blocked in its high spin state due to constraints caused by a strong intermolecular π-π stacking in its structure. On the other hand, the flexible chain of ligand L2 in compounds [Fe(L2)(2)](ClO(4))(2) (2) and [Fe(L2)(2)](BF(4))(2)·CH(3)CN·H(2)O (3) prevents structural constraints allowing for reversible spin transitions. Temperature-dependent studies of the photophysical properties of compound 3 do not reveal any obvious correlation between the fluorescence of the pyrene group and the spin state of the spin transition core.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2013
S. J. Wagner; Ferdinand Kisslinger; Stefan Ballmann; Frank Schramm; Rajadurai Chandrasekar; Tilmann Bodenstein; Olaf Fuhr; Daniel Secker; Karin Fink; Mario Ruben; Heiko B. Weber
Single-molecule spintronics investigates electron transport through magnetic molecules that have an internal spin degree of freedom. To understand and control these individual molecules it is important to read their spin state. For unpaired spins, the Kondo effect has been observed as a low-temperature anomaly at small voltages. Here, we show that a coupled spin pair in a single magnetic molecule can be detected and that a bias voltage can be used to switch between two states of the molecule. In particular, we use the mechanically controlled break-junction technique to measure electronic transport through a single-molecule junction containing two coupled spin centres that are confined on two Co(2+) ions. Spin-orbit configuration interaction methods are used to calculate the combined spin system, where the ground state is found to be a pseudo-singlet and the first excitations behave as a pseudo-triplet. Experimentally, these states can be assigned to the absence and occurrence of a Kondo-like zero-bias anomaly in the low-temperature conductance data, respectively. By applying finite bias, we can repeatedly switch between the pseudo-singlet state and the pseudo-triplet state.
Chemical Communications | 2009
Jixiang Fang; Horst Hahn; Ralph Krupke; Frank Schramm; Torsten Scherer; Bingjun Ding; Xiaoping Song
We have demonstrated a new protocol of synthesizing Ag nanowires via an electrochemical Ostwald ripening (OR) driven branch fragmentation mechanism; the branching rate of the Ag nanowires is significantly decreased by means of an electrodeposition under a strong applied-potential, following a relaxation process.
Nano Letters | 2013
Theresa Lutz; Christoph Große; Christian Dette; Alexander Kabakchiev; Frank Schramm; Mario Ruben; Rico Gutzler; Klaus Kuhnke; Uta Schlickum; Klaus Kern
Future combinations of plasmonics with nanometer-sized electronic circuits require strategies to control the electrical excitation of plasmons at the length scale of individual molecules. A unique tool to study the electrical plasmon excitation with ultimate resolution is scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Inelastic tunnel processes generate plasmons in the tunnel gap that partially radiate into the far field where they are detectable as photons. Here we employ STM to study individual tris-(phenylpyridine)-iridium complexes on a C60 monolayer, and investigate the influence of their electronic structure on the plasmon excitation between the Ag(111) substrate and an Ag-covered Au tip. We demonstrate that the highest occupied molecular orbital serves as a spatially and energetically confined nanogate for plasmon excitation. This opens the way for using molecular tunnel junctions as electrically controlled plasmon sources.
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2016
Wen Yu; Frank Schramm; Eufemio Moreno Pineda; Yanhua Lan; Olaf Fuhr; Jinjie Chen; Hironari Isshiki; Wolfgang Wernsdorfer; Wulf Wulfhekel; Mario Ruben
Summary A series of 2,2’-bipyrimidine-bridged dinuclear lanthanide complexes with the general formula [Ln(tmhd)3]2bpm (tmhd = 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionate, bpm = 2,2’-bipyrimidine, Ln = Gd(III), 1; Tb(III), 2; Dy(III), 3; Ho(III), 4 and Er(III), 5) has been synthesized and characterized. Sublimation of [Tb(tmhd)3]2bpm onto a Au(111) surface leads to the formation of a homogeneous film with hexagonal pattern, which was studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The bulk magnetic properties of all complexes have been studied comprehensively. The dynamic magnetic behavior of the Dy(III) and Er(III) compounds clearly exhibits single molecule magnet (SMM) characteristics with an energy barrier of 97 and 25 K, respectively. Moreover, micro-SQUID measurements on single crystals confirm their SMM behavior with the presence of hysteresis loops.
Nano Letters | 2014
Christoph Große; Alexander Kabakchiev; Theresa Lutz; Romain Froidevaux; Frank Schramm; Mario Ruben; Markus Etzkorn; Uta Schlickum; Klaus Kuhnke; Klaus Kern
Controlling light on the nanoscale in a similar way as electric currents has the potential to revolutionize the exchange and processing of information. Although light can be guided on this scale by coupling it to plasmons, that is, collective electron oscillations in metals, their local electronic control remains a challenge. Here, we demonstrate that an individual quantum system is able to dynamically gate the electrical plasmon generation. Using a single molecule in a double tunnel barrier between two electrodes we show that this gating can be exploited to monitor fast changes of the quantum system itself and to realize a single-molecule plasmon-generating field-effect transistor operable in the gigahertz range. This opens new avenues toward atomic scale quantum interfaces bridging nanoelectronics and nanophotonics.
Physical Review B | 2015
L. Zhang; A. Bagrets; D. Xenioti; Richard Korytár; Michael Schackert; Toshio Miyamachi; Frank Schramm; Olaf Fuhr; Rajadurai Chandrasekar; M. Alouani; Mario Ruben; Wulf Wulfhekel; Ferdinand Evers
We report a combined experimental and theoretical study of the Kondo effect in a series of binuclear metal-organic complexes of the form
Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B | 2005
Frank Schramm; Dirk Walther; Helmar Görls; Christian Käpplinger; Rainer Beckert
[{(\mathrm{Me}(\mathrm{hfacac})}_{2}{)}_{2}(\mathrm{bpym})]{}^{0}
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Christopher S. Kley; Jan Čechal; Takashi Kumagai; Frank Schramm; Mario Ruben; Sebastian Stepanow; Klaus Kern
, with Me = nickel (II), manganese (II), zinc (II); hfacac = hexafluoroacetylacetonate, and bpym = bipyrimidine, adsorbed on Cu(100) surface. While Kondo features did not appear in the scanning tunneling spectroscopy spectra of nonmagnetic