Matthias Meissner
University of Jena
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matthias Meissner.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013
Falko Sojka; Matthias Meissner; Christian Zwick; Roman Forker; Torsten Fritz
We developed and implemented an algorithm to determine and correct systematic distortions in low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) images. The procedure is in principle independent of the design of the apparatus (spherical or planar phosphorescent screen vs. channeltron detector) and is therefore applicable to all device variants, known as conventional LEED, micro-channel plate LEED, and spot profile analysis LEED. The essential prerequisite is a calibration image of a sample with a well-known structure and a suitably high number of diffraction spots, e.g., a Si(111)-7×7 reconstructed surface. The algorithm provides a formalism which can be used to rectify all further measurements generated with the same device. In detail, one needs to distinguish between radial and asymmetric distortion. Additionally, it is necessary to know the primary energy of the electrons precisely to derive accurate lattice constants. Often, there will be a deviation between the true kinetic energy and the value set in the LEED control. Here, we introduce a method to determine this energy error more accurately than in previous studies. Following the correction of the systematic errors, a relative accuracy of better than 1% can be achieved for the determination of the lattice parameters of unknown samples.
Ultramicroscopy | 2013
Falko Sojka; Matthias Meissner; Christian Zwick; Roman Forker; Michael Vyshnepolsky; C. Klein; Michael Horn-von Hoegen; Torsten Fritz
Low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) is a widely employed technique for the structural characterization of crystalline surfaces and epitaxial adsorbates. For technical reasons the accessible reciprocal space is limited at a given primary electron energy E. This limitation may be overcome by sweeping E to observe higher diffraction orders decisively enhancing the quantitative examination. Yet, in many cases, such as molecular films with rather large unit cells, the adsorbate reflexes become less pronounced at energies high enough to observe substrate reflexes. One possibility to overcome this problem is an intentional inclination of the sample surface during the measurement at the expense of the quantitative interpretability of then severely distorted diffraction patterns. Here, we introduce a correction method for the axially symmetric distortion in LEED images of tilted samples. We provide experimental confirmation for micro-channel plate LEED and spot-profile analysis LEED instruments using the (7×7) reconstructed surface of a Si(111) single crystal as a reference sample. Finally, we demonstrate that the correction of this distortion considerably improves the quantitative analysis of diffraction patterns of adsorbates since substrate and adsorbate reflexes can be evaluated simultaneously. As an illustrative example we have chosen an epitaxial monolayer of 3,4,9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride on Ag(111) that is known to form a commensurate superstructure.
Langmuir | 2014
Roman Forker; Julia Peuker; Matthias Meissner; Falko Sojka; Takahiro Ueba; Takashi Yamada; Hiroyuki S. Kato; Toshiaki Munakata; Torsten Fritz
Naphthalene, C10H8, is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) consisting of two fused benzene rings. From previous studies, it is known to form three different commensurate structures in thin epitaxial films on Cu(111), depending on the preparation conditions. One of these structures even exhibits a chiral motif of molecular rotations within the unit cell. In an attempt to elucidate this polymorphism, we performed in situ low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) as a function of temperature and surface coverage, revealing an unexpected and extraordinarily complex structural and thermodynamic behavior. We present experimental evidence for a phase transition from a two-dimensional gas to a highly ordered molecular solid via an intermediate metastable phase with moderate order (extending over a few lattice constants only) which undergoes a reversible orientational shift upon temperature variation. At monolayer coverage and above, we find that two different point-on-line (POL) coincident epitaxial relations constitute the dominant structures. This is remarkable because, so far, POL structures of naphthalene on Cu(111) and other substrates have either not been recognized or not obtained under the respective experimental conditions. Our results are corroborated by the analysis of characteristic moiré patterns observed in scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), indicative of a noncommensurate epitaxial registry.
ACS Nano | 2016
Matthias Meissner; Falko Sojka; Lars Matthes; F. Bechstedt; Xinliang Feng; Klaus Müllen; Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld; Roman Forker; Torsten Fritz
The epitaxy of many organic films on inorganic substrates can be classified within the framework of rigid lattices which helps to understand the origin of energy gain driving the epitaxy of the films. Yet, there are adsorbate–substrate combinations with distinct mutual orientations for which this classification fails and epitaxy cannot be explained within a rigid lattice concept. It has been proposed that tiny shifts in atomic positions away from ideal lattice points, so-called static distortion waves (SDWs), are responsible for the observed orientational epitaxy in such cases. Using low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy, we provide direct experimental evidence for SDWs in organic adsorbate films, namely hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene on graphite. They manifest as wave-like sub-Ångström molecular displacements away from an ideal adsorbate lattice which is incommensurate with graphite. By means of a density-functional-theory based model, we show that, due to the flexibility in the adsorbate layer, molecule–substrate energy is gained by straining the intermolecular bonds and that the resulting total energy is minimal for the observed domain orientation, constituting the orientational epitaxy. While structural relaxation at an interface is a common assumption, the combination of the precise determination of the incommensurate epitaxial relation, the direct observation of SDWs in real space, and their identification as the sole source of epitaxial energy gain constitutes a comprehensive proof of this effect.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017
Christian Udhardt; Felix Otto; Christian Kern; Daniel Lüftner; Tobias Huempfner; Tino Kirchhuebel; Falko Sojka; Matthias Meissner; Bernd Schröter; Roman Forker; Peter Puschnig; Torsten Fritz
Angle-resolved ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (ARUPS) was measured for one-monolayer coronene films deposited on Ag(111). The (kx,ky)-dependent photoelectron momentum maps (PMMs), which were extracted from the ARUPS data by cuts at fixed binding energies, show finely structured patterns for the highest and the second-highest occupied molecular orbitals. While the substructure of the PMM main features is related to the 4 × 4 commensurate film structure, various features with three-fold symmetry imply an additional influence of the substrate. PMM simulations on the basis of both free-standing coronene assemblies and coronene monolayers on the Ag(111) substrate confirm a sizable molecule–molecule interaction because no substructure was observed for PMM simulations using free coronene molecules.
Surface Science | 2012
Matthias Meissner; Marco Gruenewald; Falko Sojka; Christian Udhardt; Roman Forker; Torsten Fritz
Organic Electronics | 2013
Marco Gruenewald; Kristin Wachter; Matthias Meissner; Michael Kozlik; Roman Forker; Torsten Fritz
Physical Review B | 2015
Marco Gruenewald; Christoph Sauer; Julia Peuker; Matthias Meissner; Falko Sojka; Achim Schöll; Friedrich Reinert; Roman Forker; Torsten Fritz
Soft Matter | 2017
Roman Forker; Matthias Meissner; Torsten Fritz
Physical Review B | 2016
Roman Forker; Thomas Dienel; Andreas Krause; Marco Gruenewald; Matthias Meissner; Tino Kirchhuebel; Oliver Gröning; Torsten Fritz