John Tracey
Aalto University
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Featured researches published by John Tracey.
Science Advances | 2017
Shigeki Kawai; Tomohiko Nishiuchi; Takuya Kodama; Peter Spijker; Rémy Pawlak; Tobias Meier; John Tracey; Takashi Kubo; Ernst Meyer; Adam S. Foster
Atomic force microscopy can image the hydrogen atoms of single molecules via very weak hydrogen bonding. The hydrogen atom—the smallest and most abundant atom—is of utmost importance in physics and chemistry. Although many analysis methods have been applied to its study, direct observation of hydrogen atoms in a single molecule remains largely unexplored. We use atomic force microscopy (AFM) to resolve the outermost hydrogen atoms of propellane molecules via very weak C═O⋅⋅⋅H–C hydrogen bonding just before the onset of Pauli repulsion. The direct measurement of the interaction with a hydrogen atom paves the way for the identification of three-dimensional molecules such as DNAs and polymers, building the capabilities of AFM toward quantitative probing of local chemical reactivity.
Nano Letters | 2017
Kazuki Miyata; John Tracey; Keisuke Miyazawa; Ville Haapasilta; Peter Spijker; Yuta Kawagoe; Adam S. Foster; Katsuo Tsukamoto; Takeshi Fukuma
The microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolution processes have been greatly advanced by the direct imaging of nanoscale step flows by atomic force microscopy (AFM), optical interferometry, and X-ray microscopy. However, one of the most fundamental events that govern their kinetics, namely, atomistic events at the step edges, have not been well understood. In this study, we have developed high-speed frequency modulation AFM (FM-AFM) and enabled true atomic-resolution imaging in liquid at ∼1 s/frame, which is ∼50 times faster than the conventional FM-AFM. With the developed AFM, we have directly imaged subnanometer-scale surface structures around the moving step edges of calcite during its dissolution in water. The obtained images reveal that the transition region with typical width of a few nanometers is formed along the step edges. Building upon insight in previous studies, our simulations suggest that the transition region is most likely to be a Ca(OH)2 monolayer formed as an intermediate state in the dissolution process. On the basis of this finding, we improve our understanding of the atomistic dissolution model of calcite in water. These results open up a wide range of future applications of the high-speed FM-AFM to the studies on various dynamic processes at solid-liquid interfaces with true atomic resolution.
Langmuir | 2017
Hagen Söngen; Christoph Marutschke; Peter Spijker; Eric Holmgren; Ilka Hermes; Ralf Bechstein; Stefanie Klassen; John Tracey; Adam S. Foster; Angelika Kühnle
Solid-liquid interfaces are decisive for a wide range of natural and technological processes, including fields as diverse as geochemistry and environmental science as well as catalysis and corrosion protection. Dynamic atomic force microscopy nowadays provides unparalleled structural insights into solid-liquid interfaces, including the solvation structure above the surface. In contrast, chemical identification of individual interfacial atoms still remains a considerable challenge. So far, an identification of chemically alike atoms in a surface alloy has only been demonstrated under well-controlled ultrahigh vacuum conditions. In liquids, the recent advent of three-dimensional force mapping has opened the potential to discriminate between anionic and cationic surface species. However, a full chemical identification will also include the far more challenging situation of alike interfacial atoms (i.e., with the same net charge). Here we demonstrate the chemical identification capabilities of dynamic atomic force microscopy at solid-liquid interfaces by identifying Ca and Mg cations at the dolomite-water interface. Analyzing site-specific vertical positions of hydration layers and comparing them with molecular dynamics simulations unambiguously unravels the minute but decisive difference in ion hydration and provides a clear means for telling calcium and magnesium ions apart. Our work, thus, demonstrates the chemical identification capabilities of dynamic AFM at the solid-liquid interface.
ACS Nano | 2017
Shigeki Kawai; Keisuke Takahashi; Shingo Ito; Rémy Pawlak; Tobias Meier; Peter Spijker; Filippo Federici Canova; John Tracey; Kyoko Nozaki; Adam S. Foster; Ernst Meyer
According to Hückel theory, an anti-aromatic molecule possessing (4n)π-electrons becomes unstable. Although the stabilization has been demonstrated by radialene-type structures-fusing aromatic rings to anti-aromatic rings-in solution, such molecules have never been studied at a single molecular level. Here, we synthesize a cyclobutadiene derivative, dibenzo[b,h]biphenylene, by an on-surface intramolecular reaction. With a combination of high-resolution atomic force microscopy and density functional theory calculations, we found that a radialene structure significantly reduces the anti-aromaticity of the cyclobutadiene core, extracting π-electrons, while the small four-membered cyclic structure keeps a high density of the total charge.
Nanotechnology | 2016
John Tracey; Keisuke Miyazawa; Peter Spijker; Kazuki Miyata; Bernhard Reischl; Filippo Federici Canova; Andrew L. Rohl; Takeshi Fukuma; Adam S. Foster
Frequency modulation atomic force microscopy (FM-AFM) experiments were performed on the calcite (10[Formula: see text]4) surface in pure water, and a detailed analysis was made of the 2D images at a variety of frequency setpoints. We observed eight different contrast patterns that reproducibly appeared in different experiments and with different measurement parameters. We then performed systematic free energy calculations of the same system using atomistic molecular dynamics to obtain an effective force field for the tip-surface interaction. By using this force field in a virtual AFM simulation we found that each experimental contrast could be reproduced in our simulations by changing the setpoint, regardless of the experimental parameters. This approach offers a generic method for understanding the wide variety of contrast patterns seen on the calcite surface in water, and is generally applicable to AFM imaging in liquids.
Science Advances | 2018
Shigeki Kawai; Soichiro Nakatsuka; Takuji Hatakeyama; Rémy Pawlak; Tobias Meier; John Tracey; Ernst Meyer; Adam S. Foster
High-resolution atomic force microscopy can resolve the difference among B, C, and N atoms. Substituting heteroatoms into nanostructured graphene elements, such as graphene nanoribbons, offers the possibility for atomic engineering of electronic properties. To characterize these substitutions, functionalized atomic force microscopy (AFM)—a tool to directly resolve chemical structures—is one of the most promising tools, yet the chemical analysis of heteroatoms has been rarely performed. We synthesized multiple heteroatom-substituted graphene nanoribbons and showed that AFM can directly resolve elemental differences and can be correlated to the van der Waals radii, as well as the modulated local electron density caused by the substitution. This elemental-sensitive measurement takes an important step in the analysis of functionalized two-dimensional carbon materials.
Computer Physics Communications | 2015
John Tracey; Filippo Federici Canova; Olli Keisanen; David Z. Gao; Peter Spijker; Bernhard Reischl; Adam S. Foster
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2018
Kazuki Miyata; John Tracey; Keisuke Miyazawa; Ville Haapasilta; Peter Spijker; Yuta Kawagoe; Adam S. Foster; Katsuo Tsukamoto; Takeshi Fukuma
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017
Kazuki Miyata; John Tracey; Adam S. Foster; Takeshi Fukuma
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017
Keisuke Miyazawa; John Tracey; Bernhard Reischl; Peter Spijker; Adam S. Foster; Takeshi Fukuma