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Dive into the research topics where Martin Kind is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Kind.


ACS Nano | 2015

Thiolate versus Selenolate: Structure, Stability, and Charge Transfer Properties

Jakub Ossowski; Tobias Wächter; Laura Silies; Martin Kind; Agnieszka Noworolska; Florian Blobner; Dominika Gnatek; Jakub Rysz; Michael Bolte; P. Feulner; Andreas Terfort; Piotr Cyganik; Michael Zharnikov

Selenolate is considered as an alternative to thiolate to serve as a headgroup mediating the formation of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on coinage metal substrates. There are, however, ongoing vivid discussions regarding the advantages and disadvantages of these anchor groups, regarding, in particular, the energetics of the headgroup-substrate interface and their efficiency in terms of charge transport/transfer. Here we introduce a well-defined model system of 6-cyanonaphthalene-2-thiolate and -selenolate SAMs on Au(111) to resolve these controversies. The exact structural arrangements in both types of SAMs are somewhat different, suggesting a better SAM-building ability in the case of selenolates. At the same time, both types of SAMs have similar packing densities and molecular orientations. This permitted reliable competitive exchange and ion-beam-induced desorption experiments which provided unequivocal evidence for a stronger bonding of selenolates to the substrate as compared to the thiolates. Regardless of this difference, the dynamic charge transfer properties of the thiolate- and selenolate-based adsorbates were found to be nearly identical, as determined by the core-hole-clock approach, which is explained by a redistribution of electron density along the molecular framework, compensating the difference in the substrate-headgroup bond strength.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Insight into the Oriented Growth of Surface-Attached Metal-Organic Frameworks: Surface Functionality, Deposition Temperature, and First Layer Order.

Jin-Liang Zhuang; Martin Kind; Claudia M. Grytz; Frederic Farr; Martin Diefenbach; Samat Tussupbayev; Max C. Holthausen; Andreas Terfort

The layer-by-layer growth of a surface-attached metal-organic framework (SURMOF), [Cu2(F4bdc)2(dabco)] (F4bdc = tetrafluorobenzene-1,4-dicarboxylate and dabco = 1,4-diazabicyclo-[2.2.2]octane), on carboxylate- and pyridine-terminated surfaces has been investigated by various surface characterization techniques. Particular attention was paid to the dependency of the crystal orientation and morphology on surface functionality, deposition temperature, and first layer order. For the fully oriented deposition of SURMOFs, not only a suitable surface chemistry but also the appropriate temperature has to be chosen. In the case of carboxylate-terminated surfaces, the expected [100] oriented [Cu2(F4bdc)2(dabco)] SURMOF can be achieved at low temperatures (5 °C). In contrast, the predicted [001] oriented SURMOF on pyridine-terminated surface was obtained only at high deposition temperatures (60 °C). Interestingly, we found that rearrangement processes in the very first layer determine the final orientation (distribution) of the growing crystals. These effects could be explained by a surprisingly hampered substitution at the apical position of the Cu2-paddle wheel units, which requires significant thermal activation, as supported by quantum-chemical calculations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Dynamic Double Lattice of 1-Adamantaneselenolate Self-Assembled Monolayers on Au{111}

J. Nathan Hohman; Moonhee Kim; Björn Schüpbach; Martin Kind; John C. Thomas; Andreas Terfort; Paul S. Weiss

We report a complex, dynamic double lattice for 1-adamantaneselenolate monolayers on Au{111}. Two lattices coexist, revealing two different binding modes for selenols on gold: molecules at bridge sites have lower conductance than molecules at three-fold hollow sites. The monolayer is dynamic, with molecules switching reversibly between the two site-dependent conductance states. Monolayer dynamics enable adsorbed molecules to reorganize according to the underlying gold electronic structure over long distances, which facilitates emergence of the self-organized rows of dimers. The low-conductance molecules assume a (7 × 7) all-bridge configuration, similar to the analogous 1-adamantanethiolate monolayers on Au{111}. The high-conductance molecules self-organize upon mild annealing into distinctive rows of dimers with long-range order, described by a (6√5 × 6√5)R15° unit cell.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Self-Assembled Monolayers of Perfluoroanthracenylaminoalkane Thiolates on Gold as Potential Electron Injection Layers

Zibin Zhang; Tobias Wächter; Martin Kind; Swen Schuster; Jan W. Bats; Alexei Nefedov; Michael Zharnikov; Andreas Terfort

As a material with relatively small band gap and low lying valence orbitals, perfluoroanthracene (PFA) is of interest for the modification of electrode surfaces, for example, as charge injection layers for n-type organic semiconductors. To covalently attach PFA in the form of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), we developed a synthesis of derivatives with a sulfur termination, linked to the 2-position of the PFA moieties by an -NH- group and a short alkane chain with two and three methylene groups, respectively. Spectroscopic characterization of the SAMs reveals that the molecules adopt an almost upright orientation on the gold surface, with the packing density mostly determined by the steric demands of the PFA units. The number of the methylene groups in the -NH-alkyl linker has only a minor impact on the SAM structure because of the nonsymmetric attachment of the PFA units, which permits the compensation of the orientational constraints imposed by the bending potential. The investigated SAMs alter the work function of gold by +(0.59-0.64) eV, suggesting comparably strong depolarization effects, affecting the extent of the work function modification.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2014

Purification of ethanol for highly sensitive self-assembly experiments

Kathrin Barbe; Martin Kind; Christian Pfeiffer; Andreas Terfort

Summary Ethanol is the preferred solvent for the formation of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of thiolates on gold. By applying a thin film sensor system, we could demonstrate that even the best commercial qualities of ethanol contain surface-active contaminants, which can compete with the desired thiolates for surface sites. Here we present that gold nanoparticles deposited onto zeolite X can be used to remove these contaminants by chemisorption. This nanoparticle-impregnated zeolite does not only show high capacities for surface-active contaminants, such as thiols, but can be fully regenerated via a simple pyrolysis protocol.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2017

Triptycene-terminated thiolate and selenolate monolayers on Au(111)

Jinxuan Liu; Martin Kind; Björn Schüpbach; D. Käfer; Stefanie Winkler; Wenhua Zhang; Andreas Terfort; Christof Wöll

To study the implications of highly space-demanding organic moieties on the properties of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), triptycyl thiolates and selenolates with and without methylene spacers on Au(111) surfaces were comprehensively studied using ultra-high vacuum infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Due to packing effects, the molecules in all monolayers are substantially tilted. In the presence of a methylene spacer the tilt is slightly less pronounced. The selenolate monolayers exhibit smaller defect densities and therefore are more densely packed than their thiolate analogues. The Se–Au binding energy in the investigated SAMs was found to be higher than the S–Au binding energy.


Progress in Surface Science | 2009

Organic surfaces exposed by self-assembled organothiol monolayers: Preparation, characterization, and application

Martin Kind; Christof Wöll


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010

Structural characterization of self-assembled monolayers of pyridine-terminated thiolates on gold

Jinxuan Liu; Björn Schüpbach; Asif Bashir; Osama Shekhah; Alexei Nefedov; Martin Kind; Andreas Terfort; Christof Wöll


Advanced Functional Materials | 2015

The Effects of Embedded Dipoles in Aromatic Self-Assembled Monolayers

Tarek Abu-Husein; Swen Schuster; David A. Egger; Martin Kind; Tobias Santowski; Adrian Wiesner; Ryan C. Chiechi; Egbert Zojer; Andreas Terfort; Michael Zharnikov


Journal of Raman Spectroscopy | 2013

Reusable plasmonic substrates fabricated by interference lithography: a platform for systematic sensing studies

Thomas Siegfried; Martin Kind; Andreas Terfort; Olivier J. F. Martin; Michael Zharnikov; Nirmalya Ballav; H. Sigg

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Andreas Terfort

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Christof Wöll

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Björn Schüpbach

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Jan W. Bats

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Jinxuan Liu

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Alexei Nefedov

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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D. Käfer

Ruhr University Bochum

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