Gaël Reecht
University of Strasbourg
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gaël Reecht.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Gaël Reecht; H. Bulou; F. Scheurer; Speisser; B. Carrière; Fabrice Mathevet; Guillaume Schull
Structural and electronic properties of oligothiophene nanowires and rings synthesized on a Au(111) surface are investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy. The spectroscopic data of the linear and cyclic oligomers show remarkable differences which, to a first approximation, can be accounted by considering electronic state confinement to one-dimensional boxes having, respectively, fixed and periodic boundary conditions. A more detailed analysis shows that polythiophene must be treated as a ribbon (i.e., having an effective width) rather than a purely 1D structure. A fascinating consequence is that the molecular nanorings act as whispering gallery mode resonators for electrons, opening the way for new applications in quantum electronics.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Michael C. Chong; Gaël Reecht; H. Bulou; Alex Boeglin; F. Scheurer; Fabrice Mathevet; Guillaume Schull
A molecular wire containing an emitting molecular center is controllably suspended between the plasmonic electrodes of a cryogenic scanning tunneling microscope. Passing current through this circuit generates an ultranarrow-line emission at an energy of ≈1.5 eV which is assigned to the fluorescence of the molecular center. Control over the linewidth is obtained by progressively detaching the emitting unit from the surface. The recorded spectra also reveal several vibronic peaks of low intensities that can be viewed as a fingerprint of the emitter. Surface plasmons localized at the tip-sample interface are shown to play a major role in both excitation and emission of the molecular excitons.
Nano Letters | 2016
Nils Krane; Christian Lotze; Julia M. Läger; Gaël Reecht; Katharina J. Franke
Monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides are interesting materials for optoelectronic devices due to their direct electronic band gaps in the visible spectral range. Here, we grow single layers of MoS2 on Au(111) and find that nanometer-sized patches exhibit an electronic structure similar to their freestanding analogue. We ascribe the electronic decoupling from the Au substrate to the incorporation of vacancy islands underneath the intact MoS2 layer. Excitation of the patches by electrons from the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope leads to luminescence of the MoS2 junction and reflects the one-electron band structure of the quasi-freestanding layer.
ACS Nano | 2016
Gaël Reecht; Christian Lotze; Dmytro Sysoiev; Thomas Huhn; Katharina J. Franke
Diarylethene molecules are prototype molecular switches with their two isomeric forms exhibiting strikingly different conductance, while maintaining similar length. We employed low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) to resolve the energy and the spatial extend of the molecular orbitals of the open and closed isomers when lying on a Au(111) surface. We find an intriguing difference in the extension of the respective HOMOs and a peculiar energy splitting of the formerly degenerate LUMO of the open isomer. We then lift the two isomers with the tip of the STM and measure the current through the individual molecules. By a simple analytical model of the transport, we show that the previously determined orbital characteristics are essential ingredients for the complete understanding of the transport properties. We also succeeded in switching the suspended molecules by the current, while switching the ones which are in direct contact to the surface occurs nonlocally with the help of the electric field of the tip.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015
Gaël Reecht; H. Bulou; F. Scheurer; Virginie Speisser; Fabrice Mathevet; César González; Yannick J. Dappe; Guillaume Schull
A scanning tunnelling microscope is used to pull a polythiophene wire from a Au(111) surface while measuring the current traversing the junction. Abrupt current increases measured during the lifting procedure are associated with the detachment of molecular subunits, in apparent contradiction with the expected exponential decrease of the conductance with wire length. Ab initio simulations reproduce the experimental data and demonstrate that this unexpected behavior is due to release of mechanical stress in the wire, paving the way to mechanically gated single-molecule electronic devices.
New Journal of Physics | 2017
Gaël Reecht; Benjamin W. Heinrich; H. Bulou; F. Scheurer; L. Limot; Guillaume Schull
We present an improved way for imaging the density of states of a sample with a scanning tunneling microscope, which consists in mapping the surface topography while keeping the differential conductance (dI/dV) constant. When archetypical C60 molecules on Cu(111) are imaged with this method, these so-called iso-dI/dV maps are in excellent agreement with theoretical simulations of the isodensity contours of the molecular orbitals. A direct visualization and unambiguous identification of superatomic C60 orbitals and their hybridization is then possible.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2016
Gaël Reecht; H. Bulou; Guillaume Schull; F. Scheurer
Whispering gallery modes, well-known for acoustic and optical waves, have been shown recently for electrons in molecules on surfaces. The existence of such waves opens new possibilities for nanoelectronic devices. Here we propose a simple analytical textbook model which allows the main characteristic features of such electronic waves to be understood. The model is illustrated by two- and three-dimensional experimental situations.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Gaël Reecht; F. Scheurer; Virginie Speisser; Yannick J. Dappe; Fabrice Mathevet; Guillaume Schull
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2017
Gaël Reecht; Christian Lotze; Dmytro Sysoiev; Thomas Huhn; Katharina J. Franke
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018
Laëtitia Farinacci; Gelavizh Ahmadi; Gaël Reecht; Michael Ruby; Nils Bogdanoff; Olof Peters; Benjamin W. Heinrich; Felix von Oppen; Katharina J. Franke