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Featured researches published by Paul A. Staniec.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Functionalized Supramolecular Nanoporous Arrays for Surface Templating

Luís M. A. Perdigão; Alex Saywell; Giselle N. Fontes; Paul A. Staniec; Gudrun Goretzki; Anna G. Phillips; Neil R. Champness; Peter H. Beton

Controlled self-assembly and chemical tailoring of bimolecular networks on surfaces is demonstrated using structural derivatives of 3,4:9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDI) combined with melamine (1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6-triamine). Two functionalised PTCDI derivatives have been synthesised, Br(2)-PTCDI and di(propylthio)-PTCDI, through attachment of chemical side groups to the perylene core. Self-assembled structures formed by these molecules on a Ag-Si(111)sqrt3 x sqrt3R30 degrees surface were studied with a room-temperature scanning tunneling microscope under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. It is shown that the introduction of side groups can have a significant effect upon both the structures formed, notably in the case of di(propylthio)-PTCDI which forms a previously unreported unimolecular hexagonal arrangement, and their entrapment behaviour. These results demonstrate a new route of functionalisation for network pores, opening up the possibility of designing nanostructured surface structures with chemical selectivity and applications in nanostructure templating.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Patterned Diblock Co-Polymer Thin Films as Templates for Advanced Anisotropic Metal Nanostructures

Stephan V. Roth; Gonzalo Santoro; Johannes F. H. Risch; Shun Yu; Matthias Schwartzkopf; Torsten Boese; Ralph Döhrmann; Peng Zhang; Bastian Besner; Philipp Bremer; Dieter Rukser; M. Rübhausen; Nicholas J. Terrill; Paul A. Staniec; Yuan Yao; Ezzeldin Metwalli; Peter Müller-Buschbaum

We demonstrate glancing-angle deposition of gold on a nanostructured diblock copolymer, namely polystyrene-block-poly(methyl methacrylate) thin film. Exploiting the selective wetting of gold on the polystyrene block, we are able to fabricate directional hierarchical structures. We prove the asymmetric growth of the gold nanoparticles and are able to extract the different growth laws by in situ scattering methods. The optical anisotropy of these hierarchical hybrid materials is further probed by angular resolved spectroscopic methods. This approach enables us to tailor functional hierarchical layers in nanodevices, such as nanoantennae arrays, organic photovoltaics, and sensor electronics.


Langmuir | 2014

Predicting the Orientation of Lipid Cubic Phase Films

S. J. Richardson; Paul A. Staniec; Gemma E. Newby; Nicholas J. Terrill; Joanne M. Elliott; Adam M. Squires; Wojciech Góźdź

Lipid cubic phase films are of increasingly widespread importance, both in the analysis of the cubic phases themselves by techniques including microscopy and X-ray scattering, and in their applications, especially as electrode coatings for electrochemical sensors and for templates for the electrodeposition of nanostructured metal. In this work we demonstrate that the crystallographic orientation adopted by these films is governed by minimization of interfacial energy. This is shown by the agreement between experimental data obtained using grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GI-SAXS), and the predicted lowest energy orientation determined using a theoretical approach we have recently developed. GI-SAXS data show a high degree of orientation for films of both the double diamond phase and the gyroid phase, with the [111] and [110] directions respectively perpendicular to the planar substrate. In each case, this matches the lowest energy facet calculated for that particular phase.


Langmuir | 2009

Entrapment of Decanethiol in a Hydrogen-Bonded Bimolecular Template

Luís M. A. Perdigão; Paul A. Staniec; Neil R. Champness; Peter H. Beton

We have used scanning tunneling microscopy to investigate the deposition of 1-decanethiol onto a bimolecular self-assembled network composed of PTCDI (perylene tetracarboxylic diimide) and melamine on a Au(111) surface. A new laterally organized phase in which the pores of a parallelogram bimolecular arrangement trap two decanethiol molecules is identified. Disruption of the hexagonal PTCDI-melamine network arrangement after decanethiol deposition is also observed, providing insights about the interplay between supramolecular and substrate-adsorbate interactions.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Printed Thin Magnetic Films Based on Diblock Copolymer and Magnetic Nanoparticles

Senlin Xia; Ezzeldin Metwalli; Matthias Opel; Paul A. Staniec; Eva M. Herzig; Peter Müller-Buschbaum

Printing techniques have been well established for large-scale production and have developed to be effective in controlling the morphology and thickness of the film. In this work, printing is employed to fabricate magnetic thin films composed of polystyrene coated maghemite nanoparticles (γ-Fe2O3 NPs) and polystyrene-block-poly(methyl methacrylate) (PS-b-PMMA) diblock copolymer. By applying an external magnetic field during the print coating step, oriented structures with a high content of nanoscale magnetic particles are created. The morphology of the magnetic films and the arrangement of NPs within the polymer matrix are characterized with real and reciprocal space techniques. Due to the applied magnetic field, the magnetic NPs self-assemble into microscale sized wires with controlled widths and separation distances, endowing hybrid films with a characteristic magnetic anisotropy. At the nanoscale level, due to the PS coating, the NPs disperse as single particles at low NP concentrations. The NPs self-assemble into nanosized clusters inside the PS domains when the NP concentration increases. Due to a high loading of uniformly dispersed magnetic NPs across the whole printed film, a strong sensitivity to an external magnetic field is achieved. The enhanced superparamagnetic property of the printed films renders them promising candidate materials for future magnetic sensor applications.


RSC Advances | 2015

In situ Rheo-GISANS of triblock copolymers: gelation and shear effects on quasi-crystalline structures at interfaces

Gemma E. Newby; Erik B. Watkins; Daniel Hermida Merino; Paul A. Staniec; Oier Bikondoa

The behaviour of polymeric systems at surfaces and under flow is extremely important in many applications, ranging from drug delivery to lubrication. We have studied a model triblock copolymer in deuterated water combining in situ rheology and grazing incidence small angle neutron scattering. Several thermotropic phases appear as a function of the temperature, including a bicontinuous phase not present in the bulk. Moreover, gelation can occur following a different route depending on the concentration. We show that shearing can be used to monitor the structural integrity of the micellar systems and in some cases as a tool for modifying the thermotropic phases: an fcc (face centred cubic) phase is sheared into a hcp (hexagonally close packed) phase, and is then recovered by cycling the temperature.


Scientific Reports | 2017

3D semiconducting nanostructures via inverse lipid cubic phases

M. R. Burton; C. Lei; Paul A. Staniec; Nicholas J. Terrill; Adam M. Squires; Neil M. White; Iris Nandhakumar

Well-ordered and highly interconnected 3D semiconducting nanostructures of bismuth sulphide were prepared from inverse cubic lipid mesophases. This route offers significant advantages in terms of mild conditions, ease of use and electrode architecture over other routes to nanomaterials synthesis for device applications. The resulting 3D bicontinous nanowire network films exhibited a single diamond topology of symmetry Fd3m (Q227) which was verified by Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and holds great promise for potential applications in optoelectronics, photovoltaics and thermoelectrics.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2006

Bimolecular Networks and Supramolecular Traps on Au(111)

Luís M. A. Perdigão; Edward Perkins; Ma J; Paul A. Staniec; Rogers Bl; Neil R. Champness; Peter H. Beton


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2007

Honeycomb Networks and Chiral Superstructures Formed by Cyanuric Acid and Melamine on Au(111)

Paul A. Staniec; Luís M. A. Perdigão; Rogers Bl; Neil R. Champness; Peter H. Beton


ChemPhysChem | 2007

Hierarchical organisation on a two-dimensional supramolecular network

Paul A. Staniec; Luís M. A. Perdigão; Alex Saywell; Neil R. Champness; Peter H. Beton

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Peter H. Beton

University of Nottingham

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M. R. Burton

University of Southampton

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Gemma E. Newby

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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