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Dive into the research topics where Marco Esters is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Esters.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Synthesis of inorganic structural isomers by diffusion-constrained self-assembly of designed precursors: a novel type of isomerism.

Marco Esters; Matti B. Alemayehu; Zachary Jones; Ngoc Nguyen; Michael D. Anderson; Corinna Grosse; Saskia F. Fischer; David C. Johnson

The structure of precursors is used to control the formation of six possible structural isomers that contain four structural units of PbSe and four structural units of NbSe2: [(PbSe)1.14]4[NbSe2]4, [(PbSe)1.14]3[NbSe2]3[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]1, [(PbSe)1.14]3[NbSe2]2[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]2, [(PbSe)1.14]2[NbSe2]3[(PbSe)1.14]2[NbSe2]1, [(PbSe)1.14]2[NbSe2]2[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]1[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]1, [(PbSe)1.14]2[NbSe2]1[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]2[(PbSe)1.14]1[NbSe2]1. The electrical properties of these compounds vary with the nanoarchitecture. For each pair of constituents, over 20,000 new compounds, each with a specific nanoarchitecture, are possible with the number of structural units equal to 10 or less. This provides opportunities to systematically correlate structure with properties and hence optimize performance.


ACS Nano | 2015

Influence of defects on the charge density wave of ([SnSe]1+δ)1(VSe2)1 ferecrystals

Matthias Falmbigl; Daniel Putzky; Jeffrey Ditto; Marco Esters; Sage R. Bauers; Filip Ronning; David C. Johnson

A series of ferecrystalline compounds ([SnSe]1+δ)1(VSe2)1 with varying Sn/V ratios were synthesized using the modulated elemental reactant technique. Temperature-dependent specific heat data reveal a phase transition at 102 K, where the heat capacity changes abruptly. An abrupt increase in electrical resistivity occurs at the same temperature, correlated with an abrupt increase in the Hall coefficient. Combined with the magnitude and nature of the specific heat discontinuity, this suggests that the transition is similar to the charge density wave transitions in transition metal dichalcogenides. An ordered intergrowth was formed over a surprisingly wide compositional range of Sn/V ratios of 0.89 ≤ 1 + δ ≤ 1.37. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy reveal the formation of various volume defects in the compounds in response to the nonstoichiometry. The electrical resistivity and Hall coefficient data of samples with different Sn/V ratios show systematic variation in the carrier concentration with the Sn/V ratio. There is no significant change in the onset temperature of the charge density wave transition, only a variation in the carrier densities before and after the transition. Given the sensitivity of the charge density wave transitions of transition metal dichalcogenides to variations in composition, it is very surprising that the charge density wave transition observed at 102 K for ([SnSe]1.15)1(VSe2)1 is barely influenced by the nonstoichiometry and structural defects. This might be a consequence of the two-dimensional nature of the structurally independent VSe2 layers.


ACS Nano | 2016

Structural Changes in 2D BiSe Bilayers as n Increases in (BiSe)1+δ(NbSe2)n (n = 1–4) Heterostructures

Gavin Mitchson; Erik Hadland; Fabian Göhler; Martina Wanke; Marco Esters; Jeffrey Ditto; Erik Bigwood; Kim Ta; Richard G. Hennig; Thomas Seyller; David C. Johnson

(BiSe)1+δ(NbSe2)n heterostructures with n = 1-4 were synthesized using modulated elemental reactants. The BiSe bilayer structure changed from a rectangular basal plane with n = 1 to a square basal plane for n = 2-4. The BiSe in-plane structure was also influenced by small changes in the structure of the precursor, without significantly changing the out-of-plane diffraction pattern or value of the misfit parameter, δ. Density functional theory calculations on isolated BiSe bilayers showed that its lattice is very flexible, which may explain its readiness to adjust shape and size depending on the environment. Correlated with the changes in the BiSe basal plane structure, analysis of scanning transmission electron microscope images revealed that the occurrence of antiphase boundaries, found throughout the n = 1 compound, is dramatically reduced for the n = 2-4 compounds. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements showed that the Bi 5d3/2, 5d5/2 doublet peaks narrowed toward higher binding energies as n increased from 1 to 2, also consistent with a reduction in the number of antiphase boundaries. Temperature-dependent electrical resistivity and Hall coefficient measurements of nominally stoichiometric samples in conjunction with structural refinements and XPS data suggest a constant amount of interlayer charge transfer independent of n. Constant interlayer charge transfer is surprising given the changes in the BiSe in-plane structure. The structural flexibility of the BiSe layer may be useful in designing multiple constituent heterostructures as an interlayer between structurally dissimilar constituents.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Kinetically Controlled Formation and Decomposition of Metastable [(BiSe)1+δ]m[TiSe2]m Compounds

Alexander C. Lygo; Danielle M. Hamann; Daniel B. Moore; Devin R. Merrill; Jeffrey Ditto; Marco Esters; Jacob Orlowicz; David C. Johnson

Preparing homologous series of compounds allows chemists to rapidly discover new compounds with predictable structure and properties. Synthesizing compounds within such a series involves navigating a free energy landscape defined by the interactions within and between constituent atoms. Historically, synthesis approaches are typically limited to forming only the most thermodynamically stable compound under the reaction conditions. Presented here is the synthesis, via self-assembly of designed precursors, of isocompositional incommensurate layered compounds [(BiSe)1+δ] m[TiSe2] m with m = 1, 2, and 3. The structure of the BiSe bilayer in the m = 1 compound is not that of the binary compound, and this is the first example of compounds where a BiSe layer thicker than a bilayer in heterostructures has been prepared. Specular and in-plane X-ray diffraction combined with high-resolution electron microscopy data was used to follow the formation of the compounds during low-temperature annealing and the subsequent decomposition of the m = 2 and 3 compounds into [(BiSe)1+δ]1[TiSe2]1 at elevated temperatures. These results show that the structure of the precursor can be used to control reaction kinetics, enabling the synthesis of kinetically stable compounds that are not accessible via traditional techniques. The data collected as a function of temperature and time enabled us to schematically construct the topology of the free energy landscape about the local free energy minima for each of the products.


ACS Nano | 2018

Structural Changes as a Function of Thickness in [(SnSe)1+δ]mTiSe2 Heterostructures.

Danielle M. Hamann; Alexander C. Lygo; Marco Esters; Devin R. Merrill; Jeffrey Ditto; Duncan R. Sutherland; Sage R. Bauers; David C. Johnson

Single- and few-layer metal chalcogenide compounds are of significant interest due to structural changes and emergent electronic properties on reducing dimensionality from three to two dimensions. To explore dimensionality effects in SnSe, a series of [(SnSe)1+δ]mTiSe2 intergrowth structures with increasing SnSe layer thickness (m = 1-4) were prepared from designed thin-film precursors. In-plane diffraction patterns indicated that significant structural changes occurred in the basal plane of the SnSe constituent as m is increased. Scanning transmission electron microscopy cross-sectional images of the m = 1 compound indicate long-range coherence between layers, whereas the m ≥ 2 compounds show extensive rotational disorder between the constituent layers. For m ≥ 2, the images of the SnSe constituent contain a variety of stacking sequences of SnSe bilayers. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the formation energy is similar for several different SnSe stacking sequences. The compounds show unexpected transport properties as m is increased, including the first p-type behavior observed in (MSe)m(TiSe2)n compounds. The resistivity of the m ≥ 2 compounds is larger than for m = 1, with m = 2 being the largest. At room temperature, the Hall coefficient is positive for m = 1 and negative for m = 2-4. The Hall coefficient of the m = 2 compound changes sign as temperature is decreased. The room-temperature Seebeck coefficient, however, switches from negative to positive at m = 3. These properties are incompatible with single band transport indicating that the compounds are not simple composites.


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Tuning Electrical Properties through Control of TiSe2 Thickness in (BiSe)1+δ(TiSe2)n Compounds

Suzannah R. Wood; Devin R. Merrill; Matthias Falmbigl; Daniel B. Moore; Jeffrey Ditto; Marco Esters; David C. Johnson


Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 2016

Synthesis, structure and magnetic properties of crystallographically aligned CuCr2Se4 thin films

Marco Esters; Andreas Liebig; Jeffrey Ditto; Matthias Falmbigl; M. Albrecht; David C. Johnson


Acta Materialia | 2018

Investigation of the phase change mechanism of Ge 6 Sn 2 Sb 2 Te 11

Christine Koch; Torben Dankwort; Anna-Lena Hansen; Marco Esters; Dietrich Häußler; Hanno Volker; Alexander von Hoegen; Matthias Wuttig; David C. Johnson; Wolfgang Bensch; Lorenz Kienle


Physical Review B | 2017

Dynamic instabilities in strongly correlated VSe2 monolayers and bilayers

Marco Esters; Richard G. Hennig; David C. Johnson


Chemistry of Materials | 2017

Charge Density Wave Transition in (PbSe)1+δ(VSe2)n Compounds with n = 1, 2, and 3

Omar K. Hite; Matthias Falmbigl; Matti B. Alemayehu; Marco Esters; Suzannah R. Wood; David C. Johnson

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