Joost van der Lit
Utrecht University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Joost van der Lit.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Sampsa K. Hämäläinen; Nadine J. van der Heijden; Joost van der Lit; Stephan den Hartog; Peter Liljeroth; Ingmar Swart
Intermolecular features in atomic force microscopy images of organic molecules have been ascribed to intermolecular bonds. A recent theoretical study [P. Hapala et al., Phys. Rev. B 90, 085421 (2014)] showed that these features can also be explained by the flexibility of molecule-terminated tips. We probe this effect by carrying out atomic force microscopy experiments on a model system that contains regions where intermolecular bonds should and should not exist between close-by molecules. Intermolecular features are observed in both regions, demonstrating that intermolecular contrast cannot be directly interpreted as intermolecular bonds.
ACS Nano | 2012
Mark P. Boneschanscher; Joost van der Lit; Zhixiang Sun; Ingmar Swart; Peter Liljeroth; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of graphene and graphite show contrast with atomic periodicity. However, the contrast patterns vary depending on the atomic termination of the AFM tip apex and the tip-sample distance, hampering the identification of the atomic positions. Here, we report quantitative AFM imaging of epitaxial graphene using inert (carbon-monoxide-terminated) and reactive (iridium-terminated) tips. The atomic image contrast is markedly different with these tip terminations. With a reactive tip, we observe an inversion from attractive to repulsive atomic contrast with decreasing tip-sample distance, while a nonreactive tip only yields repulsive atomic contrast. We are able to identify the atoms with both tips at any tip-sample distance. This is a prerequisite for future structural and chemical analysis of adatoms, defects, and the edges of graphene nanostructures, crucial for understanding nanoscale graphene devices.
Nature Communications | 2016
Prokop Hapala; Martin Švec; Oleksandr Stetsovych; Nadine J. van der Heijden; Martin Ondráček; Joost van der Lit; Pingo Mutombo; Ingmar Swart; Pavel Jelínek
How electronic charge is distributed over a molecule determines to a large extent its chemical properties. Here, we demonstrate how the electrostatic force field, originating from the inhomogeneous charge distribution in a molecule, can be measured with submolecular resolution. We exploit the fact that distortions typically observed in high-resolution atomic force microscopy images are for a significant part caused by the electrostatic force acting between charges of the tip and the molecule of interest. By finding a geometrical transformation between two high-resolution AFM images acquired with two different tips, the electrostatic force field or potential over individual molecules and self-assemblies thereof can be reconstructed with submolecular resolution.
ACS Nano | 2016
Nadine J. van der Heijden; Prokop Hapala; Jeroen A. Rombouts; Joost van der Lit; Daniël Smith; Pingo Mutombo; Martin Švec; Pavel Jelínek; Ingmar Swart
Scanning tunneling microscopy and atomic force microscopy can provide detailed information about the geometric and electronic structure of molecules with submolecular spatial resolution. However, an essential capability to realize the full potential of these techniques for chemical applications is missing from the scanning probe toolbox: chemical recognition of organic molecules. Here, we show that maps of the minima of frequency shift-distance curves extracted from 3D data cubes contain characteristic contrast. A detailed theoretical analysis based on density functional theory and molecular mechanics shows that these features are characteristic for the investigated species. Structurally similar but chemically distinct molecules yield significantly different features. We find that the van der Waals and Pauli interaction, together with the specific adsorption geometry of a given molecule on the surface, accounts for the observed contrast.
New Journal of Physics | 2015
Joost van der Lit; Peter H. Jacobse; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh; Ingmar Swart
Semiconducting graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are envisioned to play an important role in future electronics. This requires the GNRs to be placed on a surface where they may become strained. Theory predicts that axial strain, i.e. in-plane bending of the GNR, will cause a change in the band gap of the GNR. This may negatively affect device performance. Using the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope we controllably bent and buckled atomically well-defined narrow armchair GNR and subsequently probed the changes in the local density of states. These experiments show that the band gap of 7-ac-GNR is very robust to in-plane bending and out-of-plane buckling.
Chemistry of Materials | 2018
Anne C. Berends; Ward van der Stam; Quinten A. Akkerman; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Joost van der Lit; Celso de Mello Donegá
We present the synthesis of colloidal anisotropic Cu2–xSe nanocrystals (NCs) with excellent size and shape control, using the unexplored phosphine-free selenium precursor 1-dodecaneselenol (DDSe). This precursor forms lamellar complexes with Cu(I) that enable tailoring the NC morphology from 0D polyhedral to highly anisotropic 2D shapes. The Cu2–xSe NCs are subsequently used as templates in postsynthetic cation exchange reactions, through which they are successfully converted to CdSe and CuInSe2 quantum dots, nanoplatelets, and ultrathin nanosheets. The shape of the template hexagonal nanoplatelets is preserved during the cation exchange reaction, despite a substantial reorganization of the anionic sublattice, which leads to conversion of the tetragonal umangite crystal structure of the parent Cu2–xSe NCs into hexagonal wurtzite CdSe and CuInSe2, accompanied by a change of both the thickness and the lateral dimensions of the nanoplatelets. The crystallographic transformation and reconstruction of the product NCs are attributed to a combination of the unit cell dimensionalities of the parent and product crystal phases and an internal ripening process. This work provides novel tools for the rational design of shape-controlled colloidal anisotropic Cu2–xSe NCs, which, besides their promising optoelectronic properties, also constitute a new family of cation exchange templates for the synthesis of shape-controlled NCs of wurtzite CdSe, CuInSe2, and other metal selenides that cannot be attained through direct synthesis approaches. Moreover, the insights provided here are likely applicable also to the direct synthesis of shape-controlled NCs of other metal selenides, since DDSe may be able to form lamellar complexes with several other metals.
ACS Omega | 2017
Emma Folkertsma; Joost van der Lit; Francesca Di Cicco; Martin Lutz; Robertus J. M. Klein Gebbink; Ingmar Swart; Marc-Etienne Moret
Here, we report the bulk synthesis of [FeII(BMBIK)Cl2] bearing the redox noninnocent bis(methylbenzimidazolyl)ketone (BMBIK) ligand and the synthesis of the similar complex [FeI(BMBIK)]+ on a Au(111) surface using lateral manipulation at the atomic level. Cyclic voltammetry and scanning tunneling spectroscopy are shown to be useful techniques to compare the coordination compound in solution with the one on the surface. The total charge, as well as the oxidation and spin state of [FeI(BMBIK)]+, are investigated by comparison of the shape of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO), visualized by tunneling through the LUMO, with theoretical models. The similar reduction potentials found for the solution and surface compounds indicate that the major effect of lowering the LUMO upon coordination of BMBIK to the iron center is conserved on the surface. The synthesis and analysis of [FeI(BMBIK)]+ using scanning tunneling microscopy, scanning tunneling spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy are the first steps toward mechanistic studies of homogeneous catalysts with redox noninnocent ligands at the single molecule level.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017
Fabian Schulz; Peter H. Jacobse; Filippo Federici Canova; Joost van der Lit; David Z. Gao; Adrianus van den Hoogenband; Patrick Han; Robertus J. M. Klein Gebbink; Marc-Etienne Moret; Pekka Joensuu; Ingmar Swart; Peter Liljeroth
Theriogenology | 2014
Arjan Boerke; Joost van der Lit; Francesca Lolicato; T.A.E. Stout; J. Bernd Helms; Bart M. Gadella
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016
Joost van der Lit; Jolien L. Marsman; Rik S. Koster; Peter H. Jacobse; Stephan den Hartog; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh; Robertus J. M. Klein Gebbink; Laura Filion; Ingmar Swart