Mattia Fanetti
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mattia Fanetti.
Nature Materials | 2010
Richard Balog; Bjarke Jørgensen; Louis Nilsson; Mie Andersen; E. D. L. Rienks; Marco Bianchi; Mattia Fanetti; Erik Lægsgaard; Alessandro Baraldi; Silvano Lizzit; Zeljko Sljivancanin; Flemming Besenbacher; Bjørk Hammer; Thomas Garm Pedersen; Philip Hofmann; Liv Hornekær
Graphene, a single layer of graphite, has recently attracted considerable attention owing to its remarkable electronic and structural properties and its possible applications in many emerging areas such as graphene-based electronic devices. The charge carriers in graphene behave like massless Dirac fermions, and graphene shows ballistic charge transport, turning it into an ideal material for circuit fabrication. However, graphene lacks a bandgap around the Fermi level, which is the defining concept for semiconductor materials and essential for controlling the conductivity by electronic means. Theory predicts that a tunable bandgap may be engineered by periodic modulations of the graphene lattice, but experimental evidence for this is so far lacking. Here, we demonstrate the existence of a bandgap opening in graphene, induced by the patterned adsorption of atomic hydrogen onto the Moiré superlattice positions of graphene grown on an Ir(111) substrate.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011
Giovanni Di Santo; Stephan Blankenburg; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; Patrizia Borghetti; L. Sangaletti; Luca Floreano; Alberto Verdini; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Manh-Thuong Nguyen; Roberto Gaspari; Daniele Passerone; A. Goldoni
Scratching the surface: Formation of a monolayer of 2H-tetraphenylporphyrins (2H-TPP) on Ag(111), either by sublimation of a multilayer in the range 525-600u2005K or by annealing (at the same temperature) a monolayer deposited at room temperature, induces a chemical modification of the molecules. Rotation of the phenyl rings into a flat conformation is observed and tentatively explained, by using DFT calculations, as a peculiar reaction due to molecular dehydrogenation.
AIP Advances | 2011
S. Ambrosini; Mattia Fanetti; V. Grillo; A. Franciosi; S. Rubini
We report on the morphological and structural properties of GaAs nanowires nucleated by self-catalyzed vapor-liquid-solid processes by molecular beam epitaxy on Si-treated GaAs substrates. We found that GaAs nanowires display zincblende and/or wurtzite phase depending on the As/Ga abundance ratio at the growth front, that determines the size and supersaturation of the Ga nanoparticles at the nanowire tip. We also found that even when growth conditions lead to the disappearance of such Ga nanoparticles, preferential one-dimensional growth continues through a vapor-solid mechanism. The nanowire portions grown by vapor solid mechanism display zincblend structure.
Applied Physics Letters | 2006
Chiara Baldacchini; Carlo Mariani; Maria Grazia Betti; Luca Gavioli; Mattia Fanetti; M. Sancrotti
The authors present a combined photoemission and scanning-tunneling spectroscopy study of the filled electronic states, the molecular energy gap, and the energy level diagram of highly ordered arrays of pentacene deposited on the Cu(119) vicinal surface. The states localized at the interface are clearly singled out, comparing the results at different pentacene thicknesses and with gas-phase photoemission data. The molecular gap of 2.35eV, the hole injection barrier of 1.05eV, and the electron injection barrier of 1.30eV determine the energy level diagram of the states localized at the pentacene molecules.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013
Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Di Santo; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; L. Sangaletti; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; A. Goldoni
Due to the growing interest in the ferromagnetic properties of Fe-octaethylporphyrins (Fe-OEP) for applications in spintronics, methods to produce stable Fe-porphyrins with no Cl atoms are highly demanded. Here, we demonstrate the formation of Fe-OEP layers on Ag(111) single crystal by the ultra high vacuum in situ metalation of the free-base 2H-2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethylporphyrin (2H-OEP) molecules. The metalation proceeds exactly as in the case of 2H-5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin (2H-TPP) on the same substrate. An extensive surface characterization by means of X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, valence band photoemission, and NEXAFS with synchrotron radiation light provides information on molecular conformation and electronic structure in the monolayer and multilayer cases. We demonstrate that the presence of the ethyl groups affects the tilt of the adsorbed molecules, the conformation of the macrocycle, and the polarization screening in multilayers, but has only a minor effect in the metalation process with respect to 2H-TPP.
ChemPhysChem | 2010
Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Di Santo; Mattia Fanetti; Rosanna Larciprete; Cinzia Cepek; Paolo Vilmercati; L. Sangaletti; Alberto Verdini; Albano Cossaro; Luca Floreano; A. Morgante; A. Goldoni
In molecular devices, the importance of interfaces cannot be neglected as they determine charge injection and charge flow and, therefore, the device performance. Herein we report on the interaction of one single layer of Zn-tetraphenyl-porphyrin with Ag(110) and Si(111). Photoemission, near-edge X-ray absorption, and resonant photoemission are used to study the bonding nature, the adsorption geometry as well as the dynamics of electron transfer between the molecules and the metal or semiconductor surfaces. Molecule-substrate charge transfer is driven by the overlap with the molecular pi orbitals. In particular, the coupling of the phenyl legs with the substrate and the relative excited charge injection are dramatically different for the two surfaces considered.
AIP Advances | 2011
B. A. Taleatu; A.Y. Fasasi; G. Di Santo; S. Bernstorff; A. Goldoni; Mattia Fanetti; Luca Floreano; Patrizia Borghetti; Loredana Casalis; B. Sanavio; Carla Castellarin-Cudia
One of the most viable ways to grow nanostructures is electro deposition. However, most electrodeposited samples are obtained by three-electrode electrochemical cell. We successfully use a much simpler two-electrode cell to grow different ZnO nanostructures from common chemical reagents. Concentration, pH of the electrolytes and growth parameters like potentials at the electrodes, are tailored to allow fast growth without complexity. Morphology and surface roughness are investigated by Scanning Electron and Air Force Microscopy (SEM and AFM) respectively, crystal structure by X-Ray Diffraction measurements (XRD) and ZnO stoichiometry by core level photoemission spectroscopy (XPS).
Archive | 2006
Iskandar Kholmanov; Mattia Fanetti; Luca Gavioli; Michele Casella; M. Sancrotti
We have studied the scanning tunneling microscopy tip interaction with the naturally formed nanotube-like (NTL) structures on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) surface. Shape variations of the NT-like structures, caused by the modulation of scanning parameters, were observed and analyzed.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011
Giovanni Di Santo; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; B. A. Taleatu; Patrizia Borghetti; L. Sangaletti; Luca Floreano; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; A. Goldoni
Physical Review B | 2005
Luca Gavioli; Mattia Fanetti; M. Sancrotti; Maria Grazia Betti