Jason D. Fabbri
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Jason D. Fabbri.
Science | 2007
Wanli Yang; Jason D. Fabbri; Trevor M. Willey; J I Lee; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Nataliya A. Fokina; W. Meevasana; Norman Mannella; K. Tanaka; X. Zhou; T. van Buuren; Michael A. Kelly; Z. Hussain; Nicholas A. Melosh; Zhi-Xun Shen
We found monochromatic electron photoemission from large-area self-assembled monolayers of a functionalized diamondoid, [121]tetramantane-6-thiol. Photoelectron spectra of the diamondoid monolayers exhibited a peak at the low–kinetic energy threshold; up to 68% of all emitted electrons were emitted within this single energy peak. The intensity of the emission peak is indicative of diamondoids being negative electron affinity materials. With an energy distribution width of less than 0.5 electron volts, this source of monochromatic electrons may find application in technologies such as electron microscopy, electron beam lithography, and field-emission flat-panel displays.
Nano Letters | 2009
William A. Clay; Zhi Liu; Wanli Yang; Jason D. Fabbri; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Yun Sun; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Nataliya A. Fokina; P. Pianetta; Nicholas A. Melosh; Zhi-Xun Shen
Recent photoemission experiments have discovered a highly monochromatized secondary electron peak emitted from diamondoid self-assembled monolayers on metal substrates. New experimental data and simulation results are presented to show that a combination of negative electron affinity and strong electron-phonon scattering is responsible for this behavior. The simulation results are generated using a simple Monte Carlo transport algorithm. The simulated spectra recreate the main spectral features of the measured ones.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Trevor M. Willey; Jason D. Fabbri; Jonathan R. I. Lee; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Nataliya A. Fokina; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Andrew L. Vance; Wanli Yang; Louis J. Terminello; Tony van Buuren; Nicolas A. Melosh
Diamondoids, hydrocarbon molecules with cubic-diamond-cage structures, have unique properties with potential value for nanotechnology. The availability and ability to selectively functionalize this special class of nanodiamond materials opens new possibilities for surface modification, for high-efficiency field emitters in molecular electronics, as seed crystals for diamond growth, or as robust mechanical coatings. The properties of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of diamondoids are thus of fundamental interest for a variety of emerging applications. This paper presents the effects of thiol substitution position and polymantane order on diamondoid SAMs on gold using near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (NEXAFS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). A framework to determine both molecular tilt and twist through NEXAFS is presented and reveals highly ordered diamondoid SAMs, with the molecular orientation controlled by the thiol location. C 1s and S 2p binding energies are lower in adamantane thiol than alkane thiols on gold by 0.67 +/- 0.05 and 0.16 +/- 0.04 eV, respectively. These binding energies vary with diamondoid monolayer structure and thiol substitution position, consistent with different degrees of steric strain and electronic interaction with the substrate. This work demonstrates control over the assembly, in particular the orientational and electronic structure, providing a flexible design of surface properties with this exciting new class of diamond nanoparticles.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2016
Karthik Thimmavajjula Narasimha; Chenhao Ge; Jason D. Fabbri; William A. Clay; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Andrey A. Fokin; Peter R. Schreiner; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Zhi-Xun Shen; Nicholas A. Melosh
Electron emission is critical for a host of modern fabrication and analysis applications including mass spectrometry, electron imaging and nanopatterning. Here, we report that monolayers of diamondoids effectively confer dramatically enhanced field emission properties to metal surfaces. We attribute the improved emission to a significant reduction of the work function rather than a geometric enhancement. This effect depends on the particular diamondoid isomer, with [121]tetramantane-2-thiol reducing golds work function from ∼ 5.1 eV to 1.60 ± 0.3 eV, corresponding to an increase in current by a factor of over 13,000. This reduction in work function is the largest reported for any organic species and also the largest for any air-stable compound. This effect was not observed for sp(3)-hybridized alkanes, nor for smaller diamondoid molecules. The magnitude of the enhancement, molecule specificity and elimination of gold metal rearrangement precludes geometric factors as the dominant contribution. Instead, we attribute this effect to the stable radical cation of diamondoids. Our computed enhancement due to a positively charged radical cation was in agreement with the measured work functions to within ± 0.3 eV, suggesting a new paradigm for low-work-function coatings based on the design of nanoparticles with stable radical cations.
Langmuir | 2013
Fei Hua Li; Jason D. Fabbri; Raisa I. Yurchenko; Alexander N. Mileshkin; J. Nathan Hohman; Hao Yan; Hongyuan Yuan; Ich C. Tran; Trevor M. Willey; Michael Bagge-Hansen; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Andrey A. Fokin; Peter R. Schreiner; Zhi-Xun Shen; Nicolas A. Melosh
Diamondoids (nanometer-sized diamond-like hydrocarbons) are a novel class of carbon nanomaterials that exhibit negative electron affinity (NEA) and strong electron-phonon scattering. Surface-bound diamondoid monolayers exhibit monochromatic photoemission, a unique property that makes them ideal electron sources for electron-beam lithography and high-resolution electron microscopy. However, these applications are limited by the stability of the chemical bonding of diamondoids on surfaces. Here we demonstrate the stable covalent attachment of diamantane phosphonic dichloride on tungsten/tungsten oxide surfaces. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy revealed that diamondoid-functionalized tungsten oxide films were stable up to 300-350 °C, a substantial improvement over conventional diamondoid thiolate monolayers on gold, which dissociate at 100-200 °C. Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light stimulated photoemission from these diamondoid phosphonate monolayers exhibited a characteristic monochromatic NEA peak with 0.2 eV full width at half-maximum (fwhm) at room temperature, showing that the unique monochromatization property of diamondoids remained intact after attachment. Our results demonstrate that phosphonic dichloride functionality is a promising approach for forming stable diamondoid monolayers for elevated temperature and high-current applications such as electron emission and coatings in micro/nano electromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS).
Advanced Materials | 2006
Ken T. Shimizu; Jason D. Fabbri; Jim J. Jelincic; Nicholas A. Melosh
Nano Letters | 2006
Ken T. Shimizu; Ragip Pala; Jason D. Fabbri; Mark L. Brongersma; Nicholas A. Melosh
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena | 2009
Trevor M. Willey; Jonathan R. I. Lee; Jason D. Fabbri; Dongbo Wang; Michael H. Nielsen; Jason C. Randel; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Natalie A. Fokina; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. K. Carlson; Louis J. Terminello; Nicholas A. Melosh; Tony van Buuren
Archive | 2012
Wanli Yang; Jason D. Fabbri; Nicholas A. Melosh; Zahid Hussain; Zhi-Xun Shen
Fuel and Energy Abstracts | 2009
Trevor M. Willey; Jonathan R. I. Lee; Jason D. Fabbri; Dongbo Wang; Michael H. Nielsen; Jason C. Randel; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Natalie A. Fokina; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Louis J. Terminello; Nicholas A. Melosh; Anthony W. van Buuren