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Dive into the research topics where Kamel Aït-Mansour is active.

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Featured researches published by Kamel Aït-Mansour.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Porous graphenes: two-dimensional polymer synthesis with atomic precision.

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.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Effect of the TiO2 Reduction State on the Catalytic CO Oxidation on Deposited Size-Selected Pt Clusters

Simon Bonanni; Kamel Aït-Mansour; W. Harbich; Harald Brune

The catalytic activity of deposited Pt(7) clusters has been studied as a function of the reduction state of the TiO(2)(110)-(1 × 1) support for the CO oxidation reaction. While a slightly reduced support gives rise to a high catalytic activity of the adparticles, a strongly reduced one quenches the CO oxidation. This quenching is due to thermally activated diffusion of Ti(3+) interstitials from the bulk to the surface where they deplete the oxygen adsorbed onto the clusters by the formation of TiO(x) (x ≃ 2) structures. This reaction is more rapid than the CO oxidation. The present results are of general relevance to heterogeneous catalysis on TiO(2)-supported metal clusters and for reactions involving oxygen as intermediate.


ACS Nano | 2011

Complex Interplay and Hierarchy of Interactions in Two-Dimensional Supramolecular Assemblies

Marta E. Cañas‐Ventura; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Pascal Ruffieux; Ralph Rieger; Klaus Müllen; Harald Brune; Roman Fasel

In order to address the interplay of hydrogen bonding, dipolar interactions, and metal coordination, we have investigated the two-dimensional mono- and bicomponent self-assembly of three closely related diaminotriazine-based molecular building blocks and a complementary perylenetetracarboxylic diimide by means of scanning tunneling microscopy. The simplest molecular species, bis-diaminotriazine-benzene, only interacts via hydrogen bonds and forms a unique supramolecular pattern on the Au(111) surface. For the two related molecular species, which exhibit in addition to hydrogen bonding also dipolar interactions and metal coordination, the number of distinct supramolecular structures increases dramatically with the number of possible interaction channels. Deposition together with the complementary perylene species, however, always results in a single well-defined supramolecular arrangement of molecules. A detailed analysis of the observed mono- and bicomponent assemblies allows shedding light on the hierarchy of the competing interactions, with important implications for the fabrication of surface-supported supramolecular networks by design.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Reaction-Induced Cluster Ripening and Initial Size-Dependent Reaction Rates for CO Oxidation on Ptn/TiO2(110)-(1×1)

Simon Bonanni; Kamel Aït-Mansour; W. Harbich; Harald Brune

We determined the CO oxidation rates for size-selected Ptn (n ∈ {3,7,10}) clusters deposited onto TiO2(110). In addition, we investigated the cluster morphologies and their mean sizes before and after the reaction. While the clusters are fairly stable upon annealing in ultrahigh vacuum up to 600 K, increasing the temperature while adsorbing either one of the two reactants leads to ripening already from 430 K on. This coarsening is even more pronounced when both reactants are dosed simultaneously, i.e., running the CO oxidation reaction. Since the ripening depends on the size initially deposited, there is nevertheless a size effect; the catalytic activity decreases monotonically with increasing initial cluster size.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Bowl Inversion of Surface-Adsorbed Sumanene

Rached Jaafar; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Giovanni Bussi; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Oliver Groening; Toru Amaya; Toshikazu Hirao; Roman Fasel; Pascal Ruffieux

Bowl-shaped π-conjugated compounds offer the possibility to study curvature-dependent host-guest interactions and chemical reactivity in ideal model systems. For surface-adsorbed π bowls, however, only conformations with the bowl opening pointing away from the surface have been observed so far. Here we show for sumanene on Ag(111) that both bowl-up and bowl-down conformations can be stabilized. Analysis of the molecular layer as a function of coverage reveals an unprecedented structural phase transition involving a bowl inversion of one-third of the molecules. On the basis of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and complementary atomistic simulations, we develop a model that describes the observed phase transition in terms of a subtle interplay between inversion-dependent adsorption energies and intermolecular interactions. In addition, we explore the coexisting bowl-up and -down conformations with respect to host-guest binding of methane. STM reveals a clear energetic preference for methane binding to the concave face of sumanene.


Nano Letters | 2008

Fabrication of a well-ordered nanohole array stable at room temperature.

Kamel Aït-Mansour; Andreas Buchsbaum; Pascal Ruffieux; Michael Schmid; P. Gröning; P. Varga; Roman Fasel; Oliver Gröning

We report on the fabrication of a new type of nanotemplate surface consisting of a hexagonally well-ordered array of one monolayer deep holes with a tunable size of about 4 nm (2) and a fixed spacing of 7 nm. The nanohole array fabrication is based on the strain-relief trigonal network formed in the 2 monolayer Ag on Pt(111) system. Removing about 0.1 ML of the Ag top layer of this surface structure, for example, by He- or Ar-ion sputtering, leads to the formation of nanoholes at specific domains of the trigonal network, which are stable at room temperature.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Impact of heterocirculene molecular symmetry upon two-dimensional crystallization

Wende Xiao; Yu-Yang Zhang; L. Tao; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Konstantin Yu. Chernichenko; Valentine G. Nenajdenko; Pascal Ruffieux; Shixuan Du; Hong-Jun Gao; Roman Fasel

Despite the development of crystal engineering, it remains a great challenge to predict the crystal structure even for the simplest molecules, and a clear link between molecular and crystal symmetry is missing in general. Here we demonstrate that the two-dimensional (2D) crystallization of heterocirculenes on a Au(111) surface is greatly affected by the molecular symmetry. By means of ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy, we observe a variety of 2D crystalline structures in the coverage range from submonolayer to monolayer for D8h-symmetric sulflower (C16S8), whereas D4h-symmetric selenosulflower (C16S4Se4) forms square and rectangular lattices at submonolayer and monolayer coverages, respectively. No long-range ordered structure is observed for C1h-symmetric selenosulflower (C16S5Se3) self-assembling at submonolayer coverage. Such different self-assembly behaviors for the heterocirculenes with reduced molecular symmetries derive from the tendency toward close packing and the molecular symmetry retention in 2D crystallization due to van der Waals interactions.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2007

Nucleation and growth of C60 overlayers on the Ag/Pt(111) dislocation network surface

Kamel Aït-Mansour; Pascal Ruffieux; Wende Xiao; Roman Fasel; P. Gröning; Oliver Gröning

We have investigated the room temperature growth of C60 overlayers on the strainrelief dislocation network formed by two monolayers of Ag on Pt(111) by means of scanning tunneling microscopy. Extended domains of highly ordered dislocation networks with a typical superlattice parameter of 6.8 nm have been prepared, serving as templates for subsequent C60 depositions. For low C60 coverages, the molecules decorate the step-edges, where also the first islands nucleate. This indicates that at room temperature the C60 molecules are sufficiently mobile to cross the dislocation lines and to diffuse to the step-edges. For C60 coverages of 0.4 monolayer, besides the islands nucleated at the step-edges, C60 islands also grow in the middle of terraces. The C60 islands typically extend over several unit cells of the dislocation network and show an unusual orientation of the hexagonally close-packed C60 lattice as compared to that found on the bare Ag(111) surface. Whereas C60 grows preferentially in a (2 √3 × 2 √3) R30° structure on Ag(111), on the Ag/Pt(111) dislocation network the C60 lattice adopts an orientation rotated by 30°, with the close-packed C60 rows aligned along the dislocations which themselves are aligned along the Ag1-10 directions. For higher coverages in the range of 1-2 monolayers, the growth of C60 continues in a layer-by-layer fashion.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Two-Dimensional Polymer Formation on Surfaces: Insight into the Roles of Precursor Mobility and Reactivity

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 B | 2006

Formation of a regular fullerene nanochain lattice

Wende Xiao; Pascal Ruffieux; Kamel Aït-Mansour; Oliver Gröning; Krisztián Palotás; Werner A. Hofer; P. Gröning; Roman Fasel

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Roman Fasel

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Pascal Ruffieux

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Oliver Gröning

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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P. Gröning

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Wende Xiao

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Harald Brune

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Carlo A. Pignedoli

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Daniele Passerone

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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