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Dive into the research topics where Heath Kersell is active.

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Featured researches published by Heath Kersell.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2013

Controlled clockwise and anticlockwise rotational switching of a molecular motor

U.G.E. Perera; F. Ample; Heath Kersell; Yuan Zhang; G. Vives; Jorge Echeverría; Maricarmen Grisolia; Gwénaël Rapenne; Christian Joachim; S-W. Hla

The design of artificial molecular machines often takes inspiration from macroscopic machines. However, the parallels between the two systems are often only superficial, because most molecular machines are governed by quantum processes. Previously, rotary molecular motors powered by light and chemical energy have been developed. In electrically driven motors, tunnelling electrons from the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope have been used to drive the rotation of a simple rotor in a single direction and to move a four-wheeled molecule across a surface. Here, we show that a stand-alone molecular motor adsorbed on a gold surface can be made to rotate in a clockwise or anticlockwise direction by selective inelastic electron tunnelling through different subunits of the motor. Our motor is composed of a tripodal stator for vertical positioning, a five-arm rotor for controlled rotations, and a ruthenium atomic ball bearing connecting the static and rotational parts. The directional rotation arises from sawtooth-like rotational potentials, which are solely determined by the internal molecular structure and are independent of the surface adsorption site.


Nano Letters | 2014

Elemental fingerprinting of materials with sensitivity at the atomic limit.

Nozomi Shirato; Marvin Cummings; Heath Kersell; Yang Li; Benjamin Stripe; Daniel Rosenmann; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

By using synchrotron X-rays as a probe and a nanofabricated smart tip of a tunneling microscope as a detector, we have achieved chemical fingerprinting of individual nickel clusters on a Cu(111) surface at 2 nm lateral resolution, and at the ultimate single-atomic height sensitivity. Moreover, by varying the photon energy, we have succeeded to locally measure photoionization cross sections of just a single Ni nanocluster, which opens new exciting opportunities for chemical imaging of nanoscale materials.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Simultaneous and coordinated rotational switching of all molecular rotors in a network

Yuegang Zhang; Heath Kersell; Roman Stefak; Jorge Echeverría; Violeta Iancu; U. G. E. Perera; Yang Li; A. Deshpande; Kai-Felix Braun; Christian Joachim; Gwénaël Rapenne; Saw-Wai Hla

A range of artificial molecular systems has been created that can exhibit controlled linear and rotational motion. In the further development of such systems, a key step is the addition of communication between molecules in a network. Here, we show that a two-dimensional array of dipolar molecular rotors can undergo simultaneous rotational switching when applying an electric field from the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope. Several hundred rotors made from porphyrin-based double-decker complexes can be simultaneously rotated when in a hexagonal rotor network on a Cu(111) surface by applying biases above 1 V at 80 K. The phenomenon is observed only in a hexagonal rotor network due to the degeneracy of the ground-state dipole rotational energy barrier of the system. Defects are essential to increase electric torque on the rotor network and to stabilize the switched rotor domains. At low biases and low initial rotator angles, slight reorientations of individual rotors can occur, resulting in the rotator arms pointing in different directions. Analysis reveals that the rotator arm directions are not random, but are coordinated to minimize energy via crosstalk among the rotors through dipolar interactions.


Langmuir | 2016

Monolayer Phases of a Dipolar Perylene Derivative on Au(111) and Surface Potential Build-Up in Multilayers

Jens Niederhausen; Heath Kersell; Christos G. Christodoulou; Georg Heimel; Henrike Wonneberger; Klaus Müllen; Jürgen P. Rabe; Saw-Wai Hla; Norbert Koch

9-(Bis-p-tert-octylphenyl)-amino-perylene-3,4-dicarboxy anhydride (BOPA-PDCA) is a strongly dipolar molecule representing a group of asymmetrically substituted perylenes that are employed in dye-sensitized solar cells and hold great promise for discotic liquid crystal applications. Thin BOPA-PDCA films with orientated dipole moments can potentially be used to tune the energy-level alignment in electronic devices and store information. To help assessing these prospects, we here elucidate the molecular self-assembly and electronic structure of BOPA-PCDA employing room temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy in combination with ultraviolet and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies. BOPA-PCDA monolayers on Au(111) exclusively form in-plane antiferroelectric phases. The molecular arrangements, the increase of the average number of molecules per unit cell via ripening, and the rearrangement upon manipulation with the STM tip indicate an influence of the dipole moment on the molecular assembly and the rearrangement. A slightly preferred out-of-plane orientation of the molecules in the multilayer induces a surface potential of 1.2 eV. This resembles the giant surface potential effect that was reported for vacuum-deposited tris(8-hydroxyquinoline)aluminum and deemed applicable for data storage. Notably, the surface potential in the case of BOPA-PDCA can in part be reversibly removed by visible light irradiation.


Nature Communications | 2017

Anomalous Kondo resonance mediated by semiconducting graphene nanoribbons in a molecular heterostructure

Yang Li; Anh T. Ngo; Andrew DiLullo; Kyaw Zin Latt; Heath Kersell; Brandon Fisher; Peter Zapol; Sergio E. Ulloa; Saw-Wai Hla

Kondo resonances in heterostructures formed by magnetic molecules on a metal require free host electrons to interact with the molecular spin and create delicate many-body states. Unlike graphene, semiconducting graphene nanoribbons do not have free electrons due to their large bandgaps, and thus they should electronically decouple molecules from the metal substrate. Here, we observe unusually well-defined Kondo resonances in magnetic molecules separated from a gold surface by graphene nanoribbons in vertically stacked heterostructures. Surprisingly, the strengths of Kondo resonances for the molecules on graphene nanoribbons appear nearly identical to those directly adsorbed on the top, bridge and threefold hollow sites of Au(111). This unexpectedly strong spin-coupling effect is further confirmed by density functional calculations that reveal no spin–electron interactions at this molecule-gold substrate separation if the graphene nanoribbons are absent. Our findings suggest graphene nanoribbons mediate effective spin coupling, opening a way for potential applications in spintronics.Semiconducting graphene nanoribbon provides a platform for band-gap engineering desired for electronic and optoelectronic applications. Here, Li et al. show that graphene nanoribbon can effectively mediate the interaction of molecular magnetic moment and electronic spin in underlying metallic substrates.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2017

Controlled modulation of hard and soft X-ray induced tunneling currents utilizing coaxial metal-insulator-metal probe tips

Marvin Cummings; Nozomi Shirato; Heath Kersell; Hao Chang; Daniel Rosenmann; J. W. Freeland; Dean J. Miller; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

The effect of a local external electric field on the barrier potential of a tunneling gap is studied utilizing an emerging technique, synchrotron x-ray scanning tunneling microscopy. Here, we demonstrate that the shape of the potential barrier in the tunneling gap can be altered by a localized external electric field, generated by voltages placed on the metallic outer shield of a nanofabricated coaxial metal-insulator-metal tip, resulting in a controlled linear modulation of the tunneling current. Experiments at hard and soft x-ray synchrotron beamlines reveal that both the chemical contrast and magnetic contrast signals measured by the tip can be drastically enhanced, resulting in improved local detection of chemistry and magnetization at the surface.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Detecting element specific electrons from a single cobalt nanocluster with synchrotron x-ray scanning tunneling microscopy

Heath Kersell; Nozomi Shirato; Marvin Cummings; Hao Chang; Dean J. Miller; Daniel Rosenmann; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

We use a nanofabricated scanning tunneling microscope tip as a detector to investigate local X-ray induced tunneling and electron emission from a single cobalt nanocluster on a Au(111) surface. The tip-detector is positioned a few angstroms above the nanocluster, and ramping the incident X-ray energy across the Co photoabsorption K-edge enables the detection of element specific electrons. Atomic-scale spatial dependent changes in the X-ray absorption cross section are directly measured by taking the X-ray induced current as a function of X-ray energy. From the measured sample and tip currents, element specific X-ray induced current components can be separated and thereby the corresponding yields for the X-ray induced processes of the single cobalt nanocluster can be determined. The detection of element specific synchrotron X-ray induced electrons of a single nanocluster opens an avenue for materials characterization on a one particle at-a-time basis.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2016

Local X-ray magnetic circular dichroism study of Fe/Cu(111) using a tunneling smart tip

Andrew DiLullo; Nozomi Shirato; Marvin Cummings; Heath Kersell; Hao Chang; Daniel Rosenmann; Dean J. Miller; J. W. Freeland; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

A tunneling smart tip of a synchrotron X-ray scanning tunneling microscope provides simultaneously localized topographic, elemental and magnetic information.


XRM 2014: Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on X-Ray Microscopy | 2016

Ultra-high vacuum compatible optical chopper system for synchrotron x-ray scanning tunneling microscopy

Hao Chang; Marvin Cummings; Nozomi Shirato; Benjamin Stripe; Daniel Rosenmann; Curt Preissner; J. W. Freeland; Heath Kersell; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

High-speed beam choppers are a crucial part of time-resolved x-ray studies as well as a necessary component to enable elemental contrast in synchrotron x-ray scanning tunneling microscopy (SX-STM). However, many chopper systems are not capable of operation in vacuum, which restricts their application to x-ray studies with high photon energies, where air absorption does not present a significant problem. To overcome this limitation, we present a fully ultra-high vacuum (UHV) compatible chopper system capable of operating at variable chopping frequencies up to 4 kHz. The lightweight aluminum chopper disk is coated with Ti and Au films to provide the required beam attenuation for soft and hard x-rays with photon energies up to about 12 keV. The chopper is used for lock-in detection of x-ray enhanced signals in SX-STM.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Local X-ray Magnetic Circular Dichroism of Fe/Cu(111) using Synchrotron STM

Hao Chang; Andrew DiLullo; Nozomi Shirato; Marvin Cummings; Heath Kersell; Daniel Rosenmann; Dean J. Miller; J. W. Freeland; Saw-Wai Hla; Volker Rose

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Volker Rose

Argonne National Laboratory

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Marvin Cummings

Argonne National Laboratory

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Nozomi Shirato

Argonne National Laboratory

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Daniel Rosenmann

Argonne National Laboratory

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Dean J. Miller

Argonne National Laboratory

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Andrew DiLullo

Argonne National Laboratory

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J. W. Freeland

Argonne National Laboratory

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