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Dive into the research topics where Greg Pawin is active.

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Featured researches published by Greg Pawin.


Angewandte Chemie | 2008

A Surface Coordination Network Based on Substrate‐Derived Metal Adatoms with Local Charge Excess

Greg Pawin; Kin L. Wong; Daeho Kim; Dezheng Sun; Ludwig Bartels; Sampyo Hong; Talat S. Rahman; Robert Carp; Michael J. Marsella

In the quest for increased control and tuneability of organic patterns at metal surfaces, more and more systems emerge that rely upon coordination of metal adatoms by organic ligands using endgroups such as carbonitriles, amines, and carboxylic acids. Such systems promise great flexibility in the size and geometry of the surface pattern through choice of the ligand shape, the number and arrangement of ligating endgroups, and the nature of the metal centers. Planar (trigonal or square) arrangements of ligands around metal centers occur most commonly as a result of attractive interactions of the ligands with the substrate. In contrast, in the solution phase planar, and in particular trigonal planar, arrangements are quite rare and generally require ligands whose nature (for example bidentate, pincer shape) forces planarity. Given the relatively short history of the field of surface coordination chemistry, compared to its solution-phase counterpart, it is of great interest to know which information can be gleaned from the latter to predict that for the former. Aspects of coordination chemistry at surfaces that have attracted very little attention to date are the effective oxidation state of the metal atom, which is much more straightforward to define in the solution phase, and the response of the coordination center to the presence of ligands at a surface. This study details an effort at gaining some insight into these two aspects, using a coordination system which is particularly facile to prepare, as it relies on substrate atoms as coordination centers, rather than requiring their separate deposition. In particular, this study describes the formation of a hexagonal network of 9,10-anthracenedicarbonitrile (DCA) on Cu(111) by titration of a nearly square molecular arrangement with copper atoms released from the substrate by annealing. We apply a combination of experimental and theoretical methods and juxtapose their results with the molecular patterns formed in the absence of a substrate. Individual DCA molecules adsorb flat onto Cu(111) with the anthracene moiety parallel to the high-symmetry direction of the substrate. Figure 1 shows an STM image of DCA


Science | 2007

A Molecule Carrier

Kin L. Wong; Greg Pawin; Ki-Young Kwon; Xing Lin; T. Jiao; U. Solanki; R. H. J. Fawcett; Ludwig Bartels; Sergey Stolbov; Talat S. Rahman

We found that anthraquinone diffuses along a straight line across a flat, highly symmetric Cu(111) surface. It can also reversibly attach one or two CO2 molecules as “cargo” and act as a “molecule carrier,” thereby transforming the diffusive behavior of the CO2 molecules from isotropic to linear. Density functional theory calculations indicated a substrate-mediated attraction of ∼0.12 electron volt (eV). Scanning tunneling microscopy revealed individual steps of the molecular complex on its diffusion pathway, with increases of ∼0.03 and ∼0.02 eV in the diffusion barrier upon attachment of the first and second CO2 molecule, respectively.


ACS Nano | 2014

Postgrowth Tuning of the Bandgap of Single-Layer Molybdenum Disulfide Films by Sulfur/Selenium Exchange

Quan Ma; Miguel Isarraraz; Chen S. Wang; Edwin Preciado; Velveth Klee; Sarah Bobek; Koichi Yamaguchi; Emily Li; Patrick Odenthal; Ariana Nguyen; David Barroso; Dezheng Sun; Gretel von Son Palacio; Michael Gomez; Andrew Nguyen; Duy Le; Greg Pawin; John Mann; Tony F. Heinz; Talat S. Rahman; Ludwig Bartels

We demonstrate bandgap tuning of a single-layer MoS2 film on SiO2/Si via substitution of its sulfur atoms by selenium through a process of gentle sputtering, exposure to a selenium precursor, and annealing. We characterize the substitution process both for S/S and S/Se replacement. Photoluminescence and, in the latter case, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy provide direct evidence of optical band gap shift and selenium incorporation, respectively. We discuss our experimental observations, including the limit of the achievable bandgap shift, in terms of the role of stress in the film as elucidated by computational studies, based on density functional theory. The resultant films are stable in vacuum, but deteriorate under optical excitation in air.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Coverage and nearest-neighbor dependence of adsorbate diffusion

Kin L. Wong; Bommisetty V. Rao; Greg Pawin; Erick Ulin-Avila; Ludwig Bartels

We present data on the coverage and nearest-neighbor dependences of the diffusion of CO on Cu(111) by time-lapsed scanning tunneling microscope (STM) imaging. Most notable is a maximum in diffusivity of CO at a local coverage of one molecule per 20 substrate atoms and a repulsion between CO molecules upon approach closer than three adsites, which in combination with a less pronounced increase in potential energy at the diffusion transition state, leads to rapid diffusion of CO molecules around one another. We propose a new method of evaluating STM-based diffusion data that provides all parameters necessary for the modeling of the dynamics of an adsorbate population.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Tunability in Polyatomic Molecule Diffusion through Tunneling versus Pacing

Zhihai Cheng; Eric Chu; Dezheng Sun; Daeho Kim; Yeming Zhu; Miaomiao Luo; Greg Pawin; Kin L. Wong; Ki-Young Kwon; Robert Carp; Michael J. Marsella; Ludwig Bartels

The diffusion temperature of molecular walkers, molecules that are capable of moving unidirectionally across a substrate violating its symmetry, can be tuned over a wide range utilizing extension of their aromatic backbone, insertion of a second set of substrate linkers (converting bipedal into quadrupedal species), and substitution on the ring. Density functional theory simulation of the molecular dynamics identifies the motion of the quadrupedal species as pacing (as opposed to trotting or gliding). Knowledge about the diffusion mode allows us to draw conclusions on the relevance of tunneling to the surface diffusion of polyatomic organic molecules.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

H-atom position as pattern-determining factor in arenethiol films.

Ki-Young Kwon; Greg Pawin; Kin L. Wong; Eric C. Peters; Daeho Kim; Sampyo Hong; Talat S. Rahman; Michael J. Marsella; Ludwig Bartels

The evolution of a low coverage of benzenethiol molecules on Cu(111) during annealing shows the prevalence of S...H hydrogen bonds involving hydrogen atoms in the ortho position. The row and pattern formation of (methylated) anthracenethiols indicates intermolecular interactions in which hydrogen atoms at the terminal position of the aromatic moiety dominate. In combination, this leads to the notion that pattern formation in classes of arenethiol molecules is each governed by optimization of the intermolecular interactions of the hydrogen atom at one particular position on the arene. This may provide a general guiding principle for the design of arenethiol films.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Surface diffusive motion in a periodic and asymmetric potential.

Greg Pawin; Kin L. Wong; Ki-Young Kwon; Robert J. Frisbee; Talat S. Rahman; Ludwig Bartels

9,10-Dithioanthracene adsorbed on Cu(111) diffuses exclusively along the high-symmetry axis of the molecule-substrate system. Further reduction of the symmetry of the system by asymmetric methylation does not reduce the symmetry of the motion although it has a substantial effect on the diffusion rate (100-fold reduction) and renders the diffusion barrier asymmetric. This is in contrast to the behavior expected of a classical particle, and it provides a direct single-molecule-scale vista on the validity of The Principle of Microscopic Reversibility first formulated by Tolman in 1924, which despite its fundamental role has attracted little visualization.


Langmuir | 2013

Amplification of conformational effects via tert-butyl groups: hexa-tert-butyl decacyclene on Cu(100) at room temperature.

Greg Pawin; Adam Z. Stieg; Catherine Skibo; Maricarmen Grisolia; Reto R. Schilittler; Véronique Langlais; Yoshitaka Tateyama; Christian Joachim; James K. Gimzewski

The design of molecular systems as functional elements for use in next-generation electronic sensors and devices often relies on the addition of functional groups acting as spacers to modify adsorbate-substrate interactions. Although advantageous in many regards, these spacer groups have the secondary effect of amplifying internal conformational effects of the parent molecule. Here we investigate one such molecule-2,5,8,11,14,17-hexa-tert-butyl-decacyclene (HBDC, C60H66)-deposited on Cu(100) at monolayer and submonolayer coverages using an ultra-high vacuum (UHV) scanning tunneling microscope (STM). By combining submolecular resolution imaging with computational methods, we describe a variety of properties related to the effects of adding tert-butyl spacers to a decacyclene core, including the molecular conformation, structure, and chiral separation of the molecular adlayer, strong intermolecular interactions, and a metastable pinned conformation of the molecule brought on by deformation under high-bias conditions that enable an examination of its diffusive 2D molecular gas at room temperature. Collectively, these observations provide direct insight into the effect of adding spacers to a flexible molecular core such as decacyclene as relates to both intermolecular and adsorbate-substrate interfaces.


Langmuir | 2011

Steric blocking as a tool to control molecular film geometry at a metal surface.

Kin L. Wong; Zhihai Cheng; Greg Pawin; Dezheng Sun; Ki-Young Kwon; Daeho Kim; Robert Carp; Michael J. Marsella; Ludwig Bartels

The application of steric blocking in surface science is exemplified by the control of surface patterns through the selective methylation of pentacenetetrone. Pentacenetetrones interact (with one another) on Cu(111) via intermolecular hydrogen bonding involving the carbonyl oxygen and the adjacent hydrogen atoms. Steric blocking of the intermolecular interaction by the successive insertion of inert methyl groups at terminal locations transforms a dense molecular pattern first into isolated double rows and eventually into single rows in a highly predictable fashion. Density functional theory modeling reveals the underlying energetics.


Science | 2006

A Homomolecular Porous Network at a Cu(111) Surface

Greg Pawin; Kin L. Wong; Ki-Young Kwon; Ludwig Bartels

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Ludwig Bartels

University of California

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Kin L. Wong

University of California

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Ki-Young Kwon

University of California

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Talat S. Rahman

University of Central Florida

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Daeho Kim

University of California

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Dezheng Sun

University of California

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Robert Carp

University of California

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