Martina Corso
University of Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martina Corso.
ACS Nano | 2016
Dimas G. de Oteyza; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Néstor Merino-Díez; Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Martina Corso; Guillaume Vasseur; Celia Rogero; Enrique Guitián; J. I. Pascual; J. Enrique Ortega; Yutaka Wakayama; Diego Peña
Contributing to the need for new graphene nanoribbon (GNR) structures that can be synthesized with atomic precision, we have designed a reactant that renders chiral (3,1)-GNRs after a multistep reaction including Ullmann coupling and cyclodehydrogenation. The nanoribbon synthesis has been successfully proven on different coinage metals, and the formation process, together with the fingerprints associated with each reaction step, has been studied by combining scanning tunneling microscopy, core-level spectroscopy, and density functional calculations. In addition to the GNR’s chiral edge structure, the substantial GNR lengths achieved and the low processing temperature required to complete the reaction grant this reactant extremely interesting properties for potential applications.
Nanoscale Research Letters | 2007
Milan P. Allan; Simon Berner; Martina Corso; Thomas Greber; Jürg Osterwalder
High-temperature exposure of a Mo(110) surface to borazine (HBNH)3leads to the formation of two distinctly different self-assembling nanostructures. Depending on the substrate temperature during preparation, either well-aligned, ultra-thin boron nanowires or a single-layer stripe structure of hexagonal boron nitride forms. Both structures show one-dimensional (1D) characteristics, but in directions perpendicular to each other. It is also possible to grow the two phases in coexistence. The relative weights are controlled by the sample temperature during preparation.
Nano Letters | 2017
Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Pedro Brandimarte; Richard Balog; Martina Corso; Shigeki Kawai; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Shohei Saito; Shigehiro Yamaguchi; Ernst Meyer; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; J. I. Pascual
Bottom-up chemical reactions of selected molecular precursors on a gold surface can produce high quality graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). Here, we report on the formation of quantum dots embedded in an armchair GNR by substitutional inclusion of pairs of boron atoms into the GNR backbone. The boron inclusion is achieved through the addition of a small amount of boron substituted precursors during the formation of pristine GNRs. In the pristine region between two boron pairs, the nanoribbons show a discretization of their valence band into confined modes compatible with a Fabry-Perot resonator. Transport simulations of the scattering properties of the boron pairs reveal that they selectively confine the first valence band of the pristine ribbon while allowing an efficient electron transmission of the second one. Such band-dependent electron scattering stems from the symmetry matching between the electronic wave functions of the states from the pristine nanoribbons and those localized at the boron pairs.
ACS Nano | 2017
Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Jeremy Hieulle; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Pedro Brandimarte; Ana Barragán; Jingcheng Li; Mikel Abadia; Martina Corso; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; Diego Peña; J. I. Pascual
We report the on-surface synthesis of 7-armchair graphene nanoribbons (7-AGNRs) substituted with nitrile (CN) functional groups. The CN groups are attached to the GNR backbone by modifying the 7-AGNR precursor. Whereas many of these groups survive the on-surface synthesis, the reaction process causes the cleavage of some CN from the ribbon backbone and the on-surface cycloisomerization of few nitriles onto pyridine rings. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy and density functional theory reveal that CN groups behave as very efficient n-dopants, significantly downshifting the bands of the ribbon and introducing deep impurity levels associated with the nitrogen electron lone pairs.
Surface Science | 2009
Thomas Greber; Martina Corso; Jürg Osterwalder
Single sheets of hexagonal boron nitride on transition metals provide a model system for single layer dielectrics. The progress in the understanding of h-BN layers on transition metals of the last 10 years is shortly reviewed. Particular emphasis lies on the boron nitride nanomesh on Rh(1 1 1), which is a corrugated single sheet of h-BN, where the corrugation imposes strong lateral electric fields. Fermi surface maps of h-BN/Rh(1 1 1) and Rh(1 1 1) are compared. A h-BN layer on Rh(1 1 1) introduces no new bands at the Fermi energy, which is expected for an insulator. The lateral electric fields of h-BN nanomesh violate the conservation law for parallel momentum in photoemission and smear out the momentum distribution curves on the Fermi surface.
ACS Nano | 2016
Héctor González-Herrero; Pablo Pou; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Delia Fernández-Torre; Fabian Craes; Antonio J. Martínez-Galera; Miguel M. Ugeda; Martina Corso; J. Enrique Ortega; José M. Gómez-Rodríguez; Rubén Pérez; I. Brihuega
The local interaction between graphene and a host substrate strongly determines the actual properties of the graphene layer. Here we show that scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) can selectively help to visualize either the graphene layer or the substrate underneath, or even both at the same time, providing a comprehensive picture of this coupling with atomic precision and high energy resolution. We demonstrate this for graphene on Cu(111). Our spectroscopic data show that, in the vicinity of the Fermi level, graphene π bands are well preserved presenting a small n-doping induced by Cu(111) surface state electrons. Such results are corroborated by Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectra (ARPES) and Density Functional Theory with van der Waals (DFT + vdW) calculations. Graphene tunable transparency also allows the investigation of the interaction between the substrate and foreign species (such as atomic H or C vacancies) on the graphene layer. Our calculations explain graphene tunable transparency in terms of the rather different decay lengths of the graphene Dirac π states and the metal surface state, suggesting that it should apply to a good number of graphene/substrate systems.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Néstor Merino-Díez; Jingcheng Li; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Guillaume Vasseur; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Martina Corso; J. Enrique Ortega; Diego Peña; J. I. Pascual; Dimas G. de Oteyza
Recent advances in graphene-nanoribbon-based research have demonstrated the controlled synthesis of chiral graphene nanoribbons (chGNRs) with atomic precision using strategies of on-surface chemistry. However, their electronic characterization, including typical figures of merit like band gap or frontier band’s effective mass, has not yet been reported. We provide a detailed characterization of (3,1)-chGNRs on Au(111). The structure and epitaxy, as well as the electronic band structure of the ribbons, are analyzed by means of scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, angle-resolved photoemission, and density functional theory.
ACS Nano | 2017
Néstor Merino-Díez; Aran Garcia-Lekue; Eduard Carbonell-Sanromà; Jingcheng Li; Martina Corso; Luciano Colazzo; Francesco Sedona; Daniel Sánchez-Portal; J. I. Pascual; Dimas G. de Oteyza
We report the energy level alignment evolution of valence and conduction bands of armchair-oriented graphene nanoribbons (aGNR) as their band gap shrinks with increasing width. We use 4,4″-dibromo-para-terphenyl as the molecular precursor on Au(111) to form extended poly-para-phenylene nanowires, which can subsequently be fused sideways to form atomically precise aGNRs of varying widths. We measure the frontier bands by means of scanning tunneling spectroscopy, corroborating that the nanoribbon’s band gap is inversely proportional to their width. Interestingly, valence bands are found to show Fermi level pinning as the band gap decreases below a threshold value around 1.7 eV. Such behavior is of critical importance to understand the properties of potential contacts in GNR-based devices. Our measurements further reveal a particularly interesting system for studying Fermi level pinning by modifying an adsorbate’s band gap while maintaining an almost unchanged interface chemistry defined by substrate and adsorbate.
Science | 2004
Martina Corso; Willi Auwärter; Matthias Muntwiler; Anna Tamai; Thomas Greber; Jürg Osterwalder
Angewandte Chemie | 2007
Simon Berner; Martina Corso; Roland Widmer; Oliver Groening; Robert Laskowski; Peter Blaha; Karlheinz Schwarz; A. Goriachko; Herbert Over; Stefan Gsell; M. Schreck; Hermann Sachdev; Thomas Greber; Jürg Osterwalder