Jinming Cai
Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jinming Cai.
Nature | 2010
Jinming Cai; Pascal Ruffieux; Rached Jaafar; Marco Bieri; Thomas Braun; Stephan Blankenburg; Matthias Muoth; Ari P. Seitsonen; Moussa Saleh; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Roman Fasel
Graphene nanoribbons—narrow and straight-edged stripes of graphene, or single-layer graphite—are predicted to exhibit electronic properties that make them attractive for the fabrication of nanoscale electronic devices. In particular, although the two-dimensional parent material graphene exhibits semimetallic behaviour, quantum confinement and edge effects should render all graphene nanoribbons with widths smaller than 10 nm semiconducting. But exploring the potential of graphene nanoribbons is hampered by their limited availability: although they have been made using chemical, sonochemical and lithographic methods as well as through the unzipping of carbon nanotubes, the reliable production of graphene nanoribbons smaller than 10 nm with chemical precision remains a significant challenge. Here we report a simple method for the production of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons of different topologies and widths, which uses surface-assisted coupling of molecular precursors into linear polyphenylenes and their subsequent cyclodehydrogenation. The topology, width and edge periphery of the graphene nanoribbon products are defined by the structure of the precursor monomers, which can be designed to give access to a wide range of different graphene nanoribbons. We expect that our bottom-up approach to the atomically precise fabrication of graphene nanoribbons will finally enable detailed experimental investigations of the properties of this exciting class of materials. It should even provide a route to graphene nanoribbon structures with engineered chemical and electronic properties, including the theoretically predicted intraribbon quantum dots, superlattice structures and magnetic devices based on specific graphene nanoribbon edge states.
Chemical Communications | 2009
Marco Bieri; Matthias Treier; Jinming Cai; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Pascal Ruffieux; Oliver Gröning; P. Gröning; Marcel Kastler; Ralph Rieger; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Roman Fasel
We demonstrate, by surface-assisted coupling of specifically designed molecular building blocks, the fabrication of regular two-dimensional polyphenylene networks with single-atom wide pores and sub-nanometer periodicity.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2014
Jinming Cai; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Leopold Talirz; Pascal Ruffieux; Hajo Söde; Liangbo Liang; Vincent Meunier; Reinhard Berger; Rongjin Li; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Roman Fasel
Despite graphenes remarkable electronic properties, the lack of an electronic bandgap severely limits its potential for applications in digital electronics. In contrast to extended films, narrow strips of graphene (called graphene nanoribbons) are semiconductors through quantum confinement, with a bandgap that can be tuned as a function of the nanoribbon width and edge structure. Atomically precise graphene nanoribbons can be obtained via a bottom-up approach based on the surface-assisted assembly of molecular precursors. Here we report the fabrication of graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions and heterostructures by combining pristine hydrocarbon precursors with their nitrogen-substituted equivalents. Using scanning probe methods, we show that the resulting heterostructures consist of seamlessly assembled segments of pristine (undoped) graphene nanoribbons (p-GNRs) and deterministically nitrogen-doped graphene nanoribbons (N-GNRs), and behave similarly to traditional p-n junctions. With a band shift of 0.5 eV and an electric field of 2 × 10(8) V m(-1) at the heterojunction, these materials bear a high potential for applications in photovoltaics and electronics.
ACS Nano | 2012
Pascal Ruffieux; Jinming Cai; N. C. Plumb; L. Patthey; Deborah Prezzi; Andrea Ferretti; Elisa Molinari; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Roman Fasel
Some of the most intriguing properties of graphene are predicted for specifically designed nanostructures such as nanoribbons. Functionalities far beyond those known from extended graphene systems include electronic band gap variations related to quantum confinement and edge effects, as well as localized spin-polarized edge states for specific edge geometries. The inability to produce graphene nanostructures with the needed precision, however, has so far hampered the verification of the predicted electronic properties. Here, we report on the electronic band gap and dispersion of the occupied electronic bands of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons fabricated via on-surface synthesis. Angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy and scanning tunneling spectroscopy data from armchair graphene nanoribbons of width N = 7 supported on Au(111) reveal a band gap of 2.3 eV, an effective mass of 0.21 m(0) at the top of the valence band, and an energy-dependent charge carrier velocity reaching 8.2 × 10(5) m/s in the linear part of the valence band. These results are in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions that include image charge corrections accounting for screening by the metal substrate and confirm the importance of electron-electron interactions in graphene nanoribbons.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Leopold Talirz; Hajo Söde; Jinming Cai; Pascal Ruffieux; Stephan Blankenburg; Rached Jafaar; Reinhard Berger; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Daniele Passerone; Roman Fasel; Carlo A. Pignedoli
Atomically precise graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) can be obtained via thermally induced polymerization of suitable precursor molecules on a metal surface. This communication discusses the atomic structure found at the termini of armchair GNRs obtained via this bottom-up approach. The short zigzag edge at the termini of the GNRs under study gives rise to a localized midgap state with a characteristic signature in scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). By combining STM experiments with large-scale density functional theory calculations, we demonstrate that the termini are passivated by hydrogen. Our results suggest that the length of nanoribbons grown by this protocol may be limited by hydrogen passivation during the polymerization step.
ACS Nano | 2012
Stephan Blankenburg; Jinming Cai; Pascal Ruffieux; Rached Jaafar; Daniele Passerone; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Roman Fasel; Carlo A. Pignedoli
Graphene nanoribbons-semiconducting quasi-one-dimensional graphene structures-have great potential for the realization of novel electronic devices. Recently, graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions-interfaces between nanoribbons with unequal band gaps-have been realized with lithographic etching techniques and via chemical routes to exploit quantum transport phenomena. However, standard fabrication techniques are not suitable for ribbons narrower than ~5 nm and do not allow to control the width and edge structure of a specific device with atomic precision. Here, we report the realization of graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions with lateral dimensions below 2 nm via controllable dehydrogenation of polyanthrylene oligomers self-assembled on a Au(111) surface from molecular precursors. Atomistic simulations reveal the microscopic mechanisms responsible for intraribbon heterojunction formation. We demonstrate the capability to selectively modify the heterojunctions by activating the dehydrogenation reaction on single units of the nanoribbons by electron injection from the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope.
Nature Communications | 2014
Richard Denk; M. Hohage; P. Zeppenfeld; Jinming Cai; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Hajo Söde; Roman Fasel; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Shudong Wang; Deborah Prezzi; Andrea Ferretti; Alice Ruini; Elisa Molinari; Pascal Ruffieux
Narrow graphene nanoribbons exhibit substantial electronic bandgaps and optical properties fundamentally different from those of graphene. Unlike graphene--which shows a wavelength-independent absorbance for visible light--the electronic bandgap, and therefore the optical response, of graphene nanoribbons changes with ribbon width. Here we report on the optical properties of armchair graphene nanoribbons of width N=7 grown on metal surfaces. Reflectance difference spectroscopy in combination with ab initio calculations show that ultranarrow graphene nanoribbons have fully anisotropic optical properties dominated by excitonic effects that sensitively depend on the exact atomic structure. For N=7 armchair graphene nanoribbons, the optical response is dominated by absorption features at 2.1, 2.3 and 4.2 eV, in excellent agreement with ab initio calculations, which also reveal an absorbance of more than twice the one of graphene for linearly polarized light in the visible range of wavelengths.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Carlos M. Sánchez-Sánchez; Adrien Nicolaï; Frédéric Rossel; Jinming Cai; Junzhi Liu; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Pascal Ruffieux; Roman Fasel; Vincent Meunier
We report on the surface-catalyzed formal [2+2] and [2+2+2] cycloadditions of ortho-activated tetracene species on a Ag(111) substrate under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Three different products are obtained: tetracene dimers, trimers, and tetramers. The former results from the formation of a four-membered ring while the other two arise from cyclization into six-membered rings. These on-surface reactions have been monitored by scanning tunneling microscopy and rationalized by density functional theory calculations. Our approach, based on the reaction of ortho-dihalo precursor monomers via formal cycloadditions, establishes an additional method for the highly active field of on-surface synthesis and enables the development of novel 1D and 2D covalent carbon nanostructures.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Marco Bieri; Manh-Thuong Nguyen; Oliver Gröning; Jinming Cai; Matthias Treier; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Pascal Ruffieux; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Daniele Passerone; Marcel Kastler; Klaus Müllen; Roman Fasel
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016
Jia Liu; Thomas Dienel; Junzhi Liu; Oliver Groening; Jinming Cai; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Pascal Ruffieux; Roman Fasel
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Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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