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Dive into the research topics where Manfred Matena is active.

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Featured researches published by Manfred Matena.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Aggregation and Contingent Metal/Surface Reactivity of 1,3,8,10-Tetraazaperopyrene (TAPP) on Cu(111)

Manfred Matena; Meike Stöhr; Till Riehm; Jonas Björk; Susanne C. Martens; Matthew S. Dyer; Mats Persson; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Kathrin Müller; Mihaela Enache; Hubert Wadepohl; J. Zegenhagen; Thomas A. Jung; Lutz H. Gade

The structural chemistry and reactivity of 1,3,8,10-tetraazaperopyrene (TAPP) on Cu(111) under ultra-high-vacuum (UHV) conditions has been studied by a combination of experimental techniques (scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, XPS) and DFT calculations. Depending on the deposition conditions, TAPP forms three main assemblies, which result from initial submonolayer coverages based on different intermolecular interactions: a close-packed assembly similar to a projection of the bulk structure of TAPP, in which the molecules interact mainly through van der Waals (vDW) forces and weak hydrogen bonds; a porous copper surface coordination network; and covalently linked molecular chains. The Cu substrate is of crucial importance in determining the structures of the aggregates and available reaction channels on the surface, both in the formation of the porous network for which it provides the Cu atoms for surface metal coordination and in the covalent coupling of the TAPP molecules at elevated temperature. Apart from their role in the kinetics of surface transformations, the available metal adatoms may also profoundly influence the thermodynamics of transformations by coordination to the reaction product, as shown in this work for the case of the Cu-decorated covalent poly(TAPP-Cu) chains.


Science | 2009

Band Formation from Coupled Quantum Dots Formed by a Nanoporous Network on a Copper Surface

Jorge Lobo-Checa; Manfred Matena; Kathrin Müller; Jan Hugo Dil; F. Meier; Lutz H. Gade; Thomas A. Jung; Meike Stöhr

Coupled Copper Surface States Periodic arrays of quantum dots can create new electronic states that arise from coupling of the states created by confinement. Lobo-Checa et al. (p. 300) show that the electronic surface-state of copper can be converted into a regular array of quantum dots. An organic overlayer that is created on the copper surface has pores 1.6 nanometers in diameter that trap the surface states. The coupling of these trapped states is revealed in photoemission experiments, in which a shallow dispersive electronic band is formed. Trapped electronic states induced by a nanoporous overlayer create an artificial electronic band structure. The properties of crystalline solids can to a large extent be derived from the scale and dimensionality of periodic arrays of coupled quantum systems such as atoms and molecules. Periodic quantum confinement in two dimensions has been elusive on surfaces, mainly because of the challenge to produce regular nanopatterned structures that can trap electronic states. We report that the two-dimensional free electron gas of the Cu(111) surface state can be trapped within the pores of an organic nanoporous network, which can be regarded as a regular array of quantum dots. Moreover, a shallow dispersive electronic band structure is formed, which is indicative of electronic coupling between neighboring pore states.


Angewandte Chemie | 2008

Trimodular Engineering of Linear Supramolecular Miniatures on Ag(111) Surfaces Controlled by Complementary Triple Hydrogen Bonds

Anna Llanes-Pallas; Manfred Matena; Thomas A. Jung; Maurizio Prato; Meike Stöhr; Davide Bonifazi

Thespecificity, directionality, dynamics, and complementarity ofsuchinteractionscanallowforthedesignofalargelibraryoforganic modules bearing H-bond donor (D) and/or acceptor(A) moieties with specific programmed functions and struc-tures that could ultimately lead to the construction of manydesired functional assemblies. So far, this method has beensuccessfullyemployedonsolidsurfacesforthepreparationofextendedone-


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010

STM fingerprint of molecule-adatom interactions in a self-assembled metal-organic surface coordination network on Cu(111)

Jonas Björk; Manfred Matena; Matthew S. Dyer; Mihaela Enache; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Lutz H. Gade; Thomas A. Jung; Meike Stöhr; Mats Persson

A novel approach of identifying metal atoms within a metal-organic surface coordination network using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) is presented. The Cu adatoms coordinated in the porous surface network of 1,3,8,10-tetraazaperopyrene (TAPP) molecules on a Cu(111) surface give rise to a characteristic electronic resonance in STM experiments. Using density functional theory calculations, we provide strong evidence that this resonance is a fingerprint of the interaction between the molecules and the Cu adatoms. We also show that the bonding of the Cu adatoms to the organic exodentate ligands is characterised by both the mixing of the nitrogen lone-pair orbitals of TAPP with states on the Cu adatoms and the partial filling of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the TAPP molecule. Furthermore, the key interactions determining the surface unit cell of the network are discussed.


Small | 2016

Configuring Electronic States in an Atomically Precise Array of Quantum Boxes

Sylwia Nowakowska; Aneliia Wäckerlin; Ignacio Piquero-Zulaica; Jan Nowakowski; Shigeki Kawai; Christian Wäckerlin; Manfred Matena; Thomas Nijs; Shadi Fatayer; Olha Popova; Aisha Ahsan; S. Fatemeh Mousavi; Toni Ivas; Ernst Meyer; Meike Stöhr; J. Enrique Ortega; Jonas Björk; Lutz H. Gade; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Thomas A. Jung

A 2D array of electronically coupled quantum boxes is fabricated by means of on-surface self-assembly assuring ultimate precision of each box. The quantum states embedded in the boxes are configured by adsorbates, whose occupancy is controlled with atomic precision. The electronic interbox coupling can be maintained or significantly reduced by proper arrangement of empty and filled boxes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2008

Transforming Surface Coordination Polymers into Covalent Surface Polymers: Linked Polycondensed Aromatics through Oligomerization of N-Heterocyclic Carbene Intermediates†

Manfred Matena; Till Riehm; Meike Stöhr; Thomas A. Jung; Lutz H. Gade


Physical Review B | 2014

On-surface synthesis of a two-dimensional porous coordination network: Unraveling adsorbate interactions

Manfred Matena; Jonas Björk; Markus Wahl; Tien-Lin Lee; J. Zegenhagen; Lutz H. Gade; Thomas A. Jung; Mats Persson; Meike Stöhr


Chemical Communications | 2014

Covalent assembly of a two-dimensional molecular ‘‘sponge’’ on a Cu(111) surface: Confined electronic surface states in open and closed pores

Aneliia Shchyrba; Susanne C. Martens; Christian Wäckerlin; Manfred Matena; Toni Ivas; Hubert Wadepohl; Meike Stöhr; Thomas A. Jung; Lutz H. Gade


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Lifshitz transition across the Ag/Cu(111) superlattice band gap tuned by interface doping.

Z. M. Abd El-Fattah; Manfred Matena; M. Corso; Francisco Javier García de Abajo; Frederik Schiller; J. Enrique Ortega


Physical Review B | 2013

Scattering of surface electrons by isolated steps versus periodic step arrays

J. Enrique Ortega; Jorge Lobo-Checa; G. Peschel; S. Schirone; Z. M. Abd El-Fattah; Manfred Matena; Frederik Schiller; Patrizia Borghetti; Pietro Gambardella; Aitor Mugarza

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Jorge Lobo-Checa

Spanish National Research Council

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Meike Stöhr

University of Groningen

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J. Enrique Ortega

Spanish National Research Council

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J. Zegenhagen

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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