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Dive into the research topics where Paola Ayala is active.

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Featured researches published by Paola Ayala.


Nature Materials | 2016

Confined linear carbon chains as a route to bulk carbyne

Lei Shi; Philip Rohringer; Kazu Suenaga; Yoshiko Niimi; Jani Kotakoski; Jannik C. Meyer; Herwig Peterlik; Marius Wanko; Seymur Cahangirov; Angel Rubio; Zachary J. Lapin; Lukas Novotny; Paola Ayala; T. Pichler

Strong chemical activity and extreme instability in ambient conditions characterize carbyne, an infinite sp(1) hybridized carbon chain. As a result, much less has been explored about carbyne as compared to other carbon allotropes such as fullerenes, nanotubes and graphene. Although end-capping groups can be used to stabilize carbon chains, length limitations are still a barrier for production, and even more so for application. We report a method for the bulk production of long acetylenic linear carbon chains protected by thin double-walled carbon nanotubes. The synthesis of very long arrangements is confirmed by a combination of transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and (near-field) resonance Raman spectroscopy. Our results establish a route for the bulk production of exceptionally long and stable chains composed of more than 6,000 carbon atoms, representing an elegant forerunner towards the final goal of carbynes bulk production.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2015

X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy of graphitic carbon nanomaterials doped with heteroatoms.

Toma Susi; T. Pichler; Paola Ayala

Summary X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) is one of the best tools for studying the chemical modification of surfaces, and in particular the distribution and bonding of heteroatom dopants in carbon nanomaterials such as graphene and carbon nanotubes. Although these materials have superb intrinsic properties, these often need to be modified in a controlled way for specific applications. Towards this aim, the most studied dopants are neighbors to carbon in the periodic table, nitrogen and boron, with phosphorus starting to emerge as an interesting new alternative. Hundreds of studies have used XPS for analyzing the concentration and bonding of dopants in various materials. Although the majority of works has concentrated on nitrogen, important work is still ongoing to identify its precise atomic bonding configurations. In general, care should be taken in the preparation of a suitable sample, consideration of the intrinsic photoemission response of the material in question, and the appropriate spectral analysis. If this is not the case, incorrect conclusions can easily be drawn, especially in the assignment of measured binding energies into specific atomic configurations. Starting from the characteristics of pristine materials, this review provides a practical guide for interpreting X-ray photoelectron spectra of doped graphitic carbon nanomaterials, and a reference for their binding energies that are vital for compositional analysis via XPS.


ACS Nano | 2013

Hybrid Carbon Nanotube Networks as Efficient Hole Extraction Layers for Organic Photovoltaics

G. Dinesha M. R. Dabera; K. D. G. Imalka Jayawardena; M. R. Ranga Prabhath; Iskandar Yahya; Y. Yuan Tan; N. Aamina Nismy; Hidetsugu Shiozawa; Markus Sauer; Georgina Ruiz-Soria; Paola Ayala; Vlad Stolojan; A. A. Damitha T. Adikaari; Peter D. Jarowski; T. Pichler; S. Ravi P. Silva

Transparent, highly percolated networks of regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) (rr-P3HT)-wrapped semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWNTs) are deposited, and the charge transfer processes of these nanohybrids are studied using spectroscopic and electrical measurements. The data disclose hole doping of s-SWNTs by the polymer, challenging the prevalent electron-doping hypothesis. Through controlled fabrication, high- to low-density nanohybrid networks are achieved, with low-density hybrid carbon nanotube networks tested as hole transport layers (HTLs) for bulk heterojunction (BHJ) organic photovoltaics (OPV). OPVs incorporating these rr-P3HT/s-SWNT networks as the HTL demonstrate the best large area (70 mm(2)) carbon nanotube incorporated organic solar cells to date with a power conversion efficiency of 7.6%. This signifies the strong capability of nanohybrids as an efficient hole extraction layer, and we believe that dense nanohybrid networks have the potential to replace expensive and material scarce inorganic transparent electrodes in large area electronics toward the realization of low-cost flexible electronics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Evidence for substitutional boron in doped single-walled carbon nanotubes

Paola Ayala; Jason Reppert; M. Grobosch; M. Knupfer; T. Pichler; Apparao M. Rao

Precise determination of acceptors in the laser ablation grown B doped single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) has been elusive. Photoemission spectroscopy finds evidence for subpercent substitutional B in this material, which leads to superconductivity in thin film SWNT samples.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Effects of the reaction atmosphere composition on the synthesis of single and multiwalled nitrogen-doped nanotubes

Paola Ayala; A. Grüneis; Christian Kramberger; Mark H. Rümmeli; I.G. Solórzano; F.L. Freire; T. Pichler

Single and multiwalled nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes were grown by chemical vapor deposition varying the feedstock composition between pure acetonitrile and ethanol/acetonitrile mixtures. The advantage of using CN sources that develop close vapor pressure values has been used in order to elucidate the effects of the reaction atmosphere in the synthesis of N-doped nanotubes. Our findings show that the morphology of the nanotube material depends strongly on the composition of the reaction atmosphere. When carrying out the experiments in an atmosphere solely determined by the vapor pressure of the feedstock components, improved homogeneity is achieved with pure CN sources or low concentration of the foreign solute. Under these conditions the temperature has strong influence in the diameter distribution.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Silicon-carbon bond inversions driven by 60-keV electrons in graphene.

Toma Susi; Jani Kotakoski; Demie Kepaptsoglou; Clemens Mangler; Tracy C. Lovejoy; Ondrej L. Krivanek; Recep Zan; Ursel Bangert; Paola Ayala; Jannik C. Meyer; Quentin M. Ramasse

We demonstrate that 60-keV electron irradiation drives the diffusion of threefold-coordinated Si dopants in graphene by one lattice site at a time. First principles simulations reveal that each step is caused by an electron impact on a C atom next to the dopant. Although the atomic motion happens below our experimental time resolution, stochastic analysis of 38 such lattice jumps reveals a probability for their occurrence in a good agreement with the simulations. Conversions from three- to fourfold coordinated dopant structures and the subsequent reverse process are significantly less likely than the direct bond inversion. Our results thus provide a model of nondestructive and atomically precise structural modification and detection for two-dimensional materials.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Combined Raman spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy studies of a NanoBud structure.

Ying Tian; Delphine Chassaing; Albert G. Nasibulin; Paola Ayala; Hua Jiang; Anton S. Anisimov; Esko I. Kauppinen

We succeeded in providing for the first time the evidence of the NanoBud structure (fullerenes attached to the surface of SWCNT) by Raman spectroscopy in combination with TEM. This work was performed on the individual freestanding NanoBud structure. The Raman features corresponding to the typical vibrational modes of fullerenes were observed in the range of 1440-1480 cm(-1). The simultaneous presence of SWCNT and fullerene features in the Raman spectrum is in good agreement with the TEM and ED investigations on the same NanoBud structure, which confirmed the Raman measurement interpretation of the SWCNT chirality assignment (16,11) and the presence of fullerenes on the surface of the SWCNT.


Nanoscale | 2013

Nonlinear optical properties of boron doped single-walled carbon nanotubes

Benoy Anand; Ramakrishna Podila; Paola Ayala; Luciana Oliveira; Reji Philip; S. Siva Sankara Sai; Anvar A. Zakhidov; Apparao M. Rao

Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) exhibit excellent nonlinear optical (NLO) properties due to the delocalized π electron states present along their tube axis. Using the open aperture Z-scan method in tandem with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Raman spectroscopy, we demonstrate the simultaneous tailoring of both electronic and NLO properties of SWCNTs, from ultrafast (femtosecond) to relatively slow (nanosecond) timescales, by doping with a single substituent, viz., boron. SWCNTs were doped via a wet chemical method using B2O3, and the boron content and bonding configurations were identified using XPS. While in the ns excitation regime, the nonlinear absorption was found to increase with increasing boron concentration in the SWCNTs (due to the increasing disorder and enhanced metallicity of the SWCNTs), the saturation intensity in the fs excitation regime decreased. We attribute this counter-intuitive behavior to excited state absorption on ns timescales, and saturable absorption combined with weak two-photon transitions on fs timescales between van Hove singularities.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Spectroscopic investigation of nitrogen doped graphene

Ramakrishna Podila; Julio C. Chacón-Torres; J. T. Spear; T. Pichler; Paola Ayala; Apparao M. Rao

Current research efforts are aimed at controlling the electronic properties via doping graphene. Previously, dopant-induced changes in the Fermi velocity were observed to result in an effectively downshifted Raman peak below the G′-band for n-doped carbon nanotubes. However, in the case of N-doped graphene, we find that several Raman features vary depending upon both dopant concentration and its bonding environment. For instance, only pyridinic/pyrrolic dopants were observed to result in intense D/D′-bands with a concomitant downshift in the G′-band. Here, we correlate x-ray photoelectron measurements with Raman spectra to elucidate effects of dopant bonding configuration on vibrational properties of graphene.


ACS Nano | 2014

Revealing the adsorption mechanisms of nitroxides on ultrapure, metallicity-sorted carbon nanotubes.

Georgina Ruiz-Soria; Alejandro Pérez Paz; Markus Sauer; Duncan J. Mowbray; Paolo Lacovig; Matteo Dalmiglio; Silvano Lizzit; Kazuhiro Yanagi; Angel Rubio; A. Goldoni; Paola Ayala; T. Pichler

Carbon nanotubes are a natural choice as gas sensor components given their high surface to volume ratio, electronic properties, and capability to mediate chemical reactions. However, a realistic assessment of the interaction of the tube wall and the adsorption processes during gas phase reactions has always been elusive. Making use of ultraclean single-walled carbon nanotubes, we have followed the adsorption kinetics of NO2 and found a physisorption mechanism. Additionally, the adsorption reaction directly depends on the metallic character of the samples. Franck–Condon satellites, hitherto undetected in nanotube–NOx systems, were resolved in the N 1s X-ray absorption signal, revealing a weak chemisorption, which is intrinsically related to NO dimer molecules. This has allowed us to identify that an additional signal observed in the higher binding energy region of the core level C 1s photoemission signal is due to the C=O species of ketene groups formed as reaction byproducts . This has been supported by density functional theory calculations. These results pave the way toward the optimization of nanotube-based sensors with tailored sensitivity and selectivity to different species at room temperature.

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Hiromichi Kataura

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Kazuhiro Yanagi

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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