Hervé Cruguel
University of Paris
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Featured researches published by Hervé Cruguel.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
G. Prévot; R. Bernard; Hervé Cruguel; Y. Borensztein
Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), the elaboration of the so-called silicene layer on Ag(111) is monitored in real time during Si evaporation at different temperatures. It is shown that the growth of silicene is accompanied by the release of about 65% of the surface Ag atoms from the Si covered areas. We observe that Si islands develop on the Ag terraces and Si strips at the Ag step edges, progressively forming ordered (4×4), (13×13) R13.9°, and dotted phases. Meanwhile, displaced Ag atoms group to develop additional bare Ag terraces growing round the Si islands from the pristine Ag step edges. This indicates a strong interaction between Si and Ag atoms, with an important modification of the Ag substrate beneath the surface layer. This observation is in contradiction with the picture of a silicene layer weakly interacting with the unreconstructed Ag substrate, and strongly indicates that the structure of silicene on Ag(111) corresponds either to a Si-Ag surface alloy or to a Si plane covered with ...
Langmuir | 2016
Christophe Méthivier; Hervé Cruguel; Dominique Costa; Claire-Marie Pradier; Vincent Humblot
By changing the ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) deposition method, classical sublimation versus electrospray ionization, one can tune the chemistry of a chiral dipeptide molecule (Gly-Pro, GP), when adsorbed on a Cu(110) surface, from anionic to zwitterionic. This chemical shift will influence the adsorption mode of the dipeptide, either in a three-point fashion in the case of anionic GP molecules with a strong interaction among the copper surface, both O atoms of the carboxylate moiety, and the nitrogen atoms, or in the case of zwitterions GP, the adsorption mode relies on the sole interaction of one carboxylate oxygen atom. These different anchoring modes strongly modify the expression of surface 2D chirality and the supramolecular assemblies with two very distinct unit cells.
Nano Letters | 2017
Clément Livache; Eva Izquierdo; Bertille Martinez; Marion Dufour; Debora Pierucci; Sean Keuleyan; Hervé Cruguel; Loïc Becerra; Jean Louis Fave; Herve Aubin; Abdelkarim Ouerghi; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Mathieu G. Silly; Benoit Dubertret; Sandrine Ithurria; Emmanuel Lhuillier
We investigate the electronic and transport properties of HgTe 2D colloidal quantum wells. We demonstrate that the material can be made p- or n-type depending on the capping ligands. In addition to the control of majority carrier type, the surface chemistry also strongly affects the photoconductivity of the material. These transport measurements are correlated with the electronic structure determined by high resolution X-ray photoemission. We attribute the change of majority carriers to the strong hybridization of an n-doped HgS layer resulting from capping the HgTe nanoplatelets by S2- ions. We further investigate the gate and temperature dependence of the photoresponse and its dynamics. We show that the photocurrent rise and fall times can be tuned from 100 μs to 1 ms using the gate bias. Finally, we use time-resolved photoemission spectroscopy as a probe of the transport relaxation to determine if the observed dynamics are limited by a fundamental process such as trapping. These pump probe surface photovoltage measurements show an even faster relaxation in the 100-500 ns range, which suggests that the current performances are rather limited by geometrical factors.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
André Luis Fernandes Cauduro; Roberto dos Reis; Gong Chen; Andreas K. Schmid; Christophe Méthivier; Horst-Günter Rubahn; Léo Bossard-Giannesini; Hervé Cruguel; Nadine Witkowski; Morten Madsen
The ability to control the interfacial properties in metal-oxide thin films through surface defect engineering is vital to fine-tune their optoelectronic properties and thus their integration in novel optoelectronic devices. This is exemplified in photovoltaic devices based on organic, inorganic or hybrid technologies, where precise control of the charge transport properties through the interfacial layer is highly important for improving device performance. In this work, we study the effects of in situ annealing in nearly stoichiometric MoOx (x ∼ 3.0) thin-films deposited by reactive sputtering. We report on a work function increase of almost 2 eV after inducing in situ crystallization of the films at 500 °C, resulting in the formation of a single crystalline α-MoO3 overlaid by substoichiometric and highly disordered nanoaggregates. The surface nanoaggregates possess various electronic properties, such as a work function ranging from 5.5 eV up to 6.2 eV, as determined from low-energy electron microscopy studies. The crystalline underlayer possesses a work function greater than 6.3 eV, up to 6.9 eV, characteristic of a very clean and nearly defect-free MoO3. By combining electronic spectroscopies together with structural characterizations, this work addresses a novel method for tuning, and correlating, the optoelectronic properties and microstructure of device-relevant MoOx layers.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
Léo Bossard-Giannesini; Hervé Cruguel; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Olivier Pluchery
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are known for their localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) that can be measured with UV-visible spectroscopy. AuNPs are often deposited on silicon substrates for various applications, and the LSPR is measured in reflection. In this case, optical spectra are measured by surface differential reflectance spectroscopy (SDRS) and the absorbance exhibits a negative peak. This article studies both experimentally and theoretically on the single layers of 16 nm diameter spherical gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) grafted on silicon. The morphology and surface density of AuNPs were investigated by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The plasmon response in transmission on the glass substrate and in reflection on the silicon substrate is described by an analytical model based on the Fresnel equations and the Maxwell-Garnett effective medium theory (FMG). The FMG model shows a strong dependence to the incidence angle of the light. At low incident angles, the peak appears negatively with a shallow intensity, and at angles above 30°, the usual positive shape of the plasmon is retrieved. The relevance of the FMG model is compared to the Mie theory within the dipolar approximation. We conclude that no Fano effect is responsible for this derivative shape. An easy-to-use formula is derived that agrees with our experimental data.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Hervé Cruguel; Clément Livache; Bertille Martinez; Silvia Pedetti; Debora Pierucci; Eva Izquierdo; Marion Dufour; Sandrine Ithurria; Hervé Aubin; Abdelkarim Ouerghi; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Mathieu G. Silly; Benoit Dubertret; Emmanuel Lhuillier
Among colloidal nanocrystals, 2D nanoplatelets (NPLs) made of cadmium chalcogenides have led to especially well controlled optical features. However, the growth of core shell heterostructures has so far been mostly focused on CdS shells, while more confined materials will be more promising to decouple the emitting quantum states of the core from their external environment. Using k·p simulation, we demonstrate that a ZnS shell reduces by a factor 10 the leakage of the wavefunction into the surrounding medium. Using X-ray photoemission (XPS), we confirm that the CdSe active layer is indeed unoxidized. Finally, we build an effective electronic spectrum for these CdSe/ZnS NPLs on an absolute energy scale which is a critical set of parameters for the future integration of this material into optoelectronic devices. We determine the work function (WF) to be 4.47 eV while the material is behaving as an n-type semiconductor.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Bertille Martinez; Clément Livache; Adrien Robin; Hervé Cruguel; Sébastien Royer; Xiang Zhen Xu; Hervé Aubin; Sandrine Ithurria; Emmanuel Lhuillier
In this article we discuss the infrared properties of self-doped nanocrystals and in particular the case of HgSe. HgSe colloidal quantum dots have recently been reported for their tunable optical features all over the mid infrared from 3 to 20 μm. Their optical absorption is a combination of interband absorption at high energy and intraband absorption at low energy. The latter results from the self-doped character of HgSe. The origin of this self-doping is also discussed. We demonstrated that the doping results from the combination of the narrow band gap and high work function of HgSe, which leads to a reduction of the CQD by the water in the environment. In addition, we demonstrated that the doping density can be tuned over an order of magnitude thanks to the control of the capping ligands.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Bertille Martinez; Clément Livache; L.Donald Mouafo Notemgnou; Nicolas Goubet; Sean Keuleyan; Hervé Cruguel; Sandrine Ithurria; Herve Aubin; Abdelkarim Ouerghi; Bernard Doudin; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Benoit Dubertret; Mathieu G. Silly; Ricardo Psm Lobo; Jean-Francois Dayen; Emmanuel Lhuillier
Self-doped colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) attract a strong interest for the design of a new generation of low-cost infrared (IR) optoelectronic devices because of their tunable intraband absorption feature in the mid-IR region. However, very little remains known about their electronic structure which combines confinement and an inverted band structure, complicating the design of optimized devices. We use a combination of IR spectroscopy and photoemission to determine the absolute energy levels of HgSe CQDs with various sizes and surface chemistries. We demonstrate that the filling of the CQD states ranges from 2 electrons per CQD at small sizes (<5 nm) to more than 18 electrons per CQD at large sizes (≈20 nm). HgSe CQDs are also an interesting platform to observe vanishing confinement in colloidal nanoparticles. We present lines of evidence for a semiconductor-to-metal transition at the CQD level, through temperature-dependent absorption and transport measurements. In contrast with bulk systems, the transition is the result of the vanishing confinement rather than the increase of the doping level.
Nano Letters | 2018
Nicolas Goubet; Clément Livache; Bertille Martinez; Xiang Zhen Xu; Sandrine Ithurria; Sébastien Royer; Hervé Cruguel; G. Patriarche; Abdelkarim Ouerghi; Mathieu G. Silly; Benoit Dubertret; Emmanuel Lhuillier
The use of intraband transition is an interesting alternative path for the design of optically active complex colloidal materials in the mid-infrared range. However, so far, the performance obtained for photodetection based on intraband transition remains much smaller than the one relying on interband transition in narrow-band-gap materials operating at the same wavelength. New strategies have to be developed to make intraband materials more effective. Here, we propose growing a heterostructure of HgSe/HgTe as a means of achieving enhanced intraband-based photoconduction. We first tackle the synthetic challenge of growing a heterostructure on soft (Hg-based) material. The electronic spectrum of the grown heterostructure is then investigated using a combination of numerical simulation, infrared spectroscopy, transport measurement, and photoemission. We report a type-II band alignment with reduced doping compared with a core-only object and boosted hole conduction. Finally, we probe the photoconductive properties of the heterostructure while resonantly exciting the intraband transition by using a high-power-density quantum cascade laser. Compared to the previous generation of material based on core-only HgSe, the heterostructures have a lower dark current, stronger temperature dependence, faster photoresponse (with a time response below 50 μs), and detectivity increased by a factor of 30.
Applied Physics Letters | 2018
Wasim J. Mir; Clément Livache; Nicolas Goubet; Bertille Martinez; Amardeep Jagtap; Audrey Chu; Nathan Coutard; Hervé Cruguel; Thierry Barisien; Sandrine Ithurria; Angshuman Nag; Benoit Dubertret; Abdelkarim Ouerghi; Mathieu G. Silly; Emmanuel Lhuillier
We discuss the transport properties of CsPbBrxI3−x perovskite nanocrystal arrays as a model ensemble system of caesium lead halide-based perovskite nanocrystal arrays. While this material is very promising for the design of light emitting diodes, laser, and solar cells, very little work has been devoted to the basic understanding of their (photo)conductive properties in an ensemble system. By combining DC and time-resolved photocurrent measurements, we demonstrate fast photodetection with time response below 2 ns. The photocurrent generation in perovskite nanocrystal-based arrays is limited by fast bimolecular recombination of the material, which limits the lifetime of the photogenerated electron-hole pairs. We propose to use nanotrench electrodes as a strategy to ensure that the device size fits within the obtained diffusion length of the material in order to boost the transport efficiency and thus observe an enhancement of the photoresponse by a factor of 1000.