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Dive into the research topics where Ryan R. Cloke is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan R. Cloke.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Site-Specific Substitutional Boron Doping of Semiconducting Armchair Graphene Nanoribbons

Ryan R. Cloke; Tomas Marangoni; Giang D. Nguyen; Trinity Joshi; Daniel J. Rizzo; Christopher Bronner; Ting Cao; Steven G. Louie; Michael F. Crommie; Felix R. Fischer

A fundamental requirement for the development of advanced electronic device architectures based on graphene nanoribbon (GNR) technology is the ability to modulate the band structure and charge carrier concentration by substituting specific carbon atoms in the hexagonal graphene lattice with p- or n-type dopant heteroatoms. Here we report the atomically precise introduction of group III dopant atoms into bottom-up fabricated semiconducting armchair GNRs (AGNRs). Trigonal-planar B atoms along the backbone of the GNR share an empty p-orbital with the extended π-band for dopant functionality. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) topography reveals a characteristic modulation of the local density of states along the backbone of the GNR that is superimposable with the expected position and concentration of dopant B atoms. First-principles calculations support the experimental findings and provide additional insight into the band structure of B-doped 7-AGNRs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Synergistic Enhancement of Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction with Gold Nanoparticles Embedded in Functional Graphene Nanoribbon Composite Electrodes

Cameron Rogers; Wade S. Perkins; Gregory Veber; Teresa E. Williams; Ryan R. Cloke; Felix R. Fischer

Regulating the complex environment accounting for the stability, selectivity, and activity of catalytic metal nanoparticle interfaces represents a challenge to heterogeneous catalyst design. Here we demonstrate the intrinsic performance enhancement of a composite material composed of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) embedded in a bottom-up synthesized graphene nanoribbon (GNR) matrix for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2. Electrochemical studies reveal that the structural and electronic properties of the GNR composite matrix increase the AuNP electrochemically active surface area (ECSA), lower the requisite CO2 reduction overpotential by hundreds of millivolts (catalytic onset > -0.2 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE)), increase the Faraday efficiency (>90%), markedly improve stability (catalytic performance sustained over >24 h), and increase the total catalytic output (>100-fold improvement over traditional amorphous carbon AuNP supports). The inherent structural and electronic tunability of bottom-up synthesized GNR-AuNP composites affords an unrivaled degree of control over the catalytic environment, providing a means for such profound effects as shifting the rate-determining step in the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO, and thereby altering the electrocatalytic mechanism at the nanoparticle surface.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Initiator Control of Conjugated Polymer Topology in Ring-Opening Alkyne Metathesis Polymerization

Stephen von Kugelgen; Donatela E. Bellone; Ryan R. Cloke; Wade S. Perkins; Felix R. Fischer

Molybdenum carbyne complexes [RC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] featuring a mesityl (R = Mes) or an ethyl (R = Et) substituent initiate the living ring-opening alkyne metathesis polymerization of the strained cyclic alkyne, 5,6,11,12-tetradehydrobenzo[a,e][8]annulene, to yield fully conjugated poly(o-phenylene ethynylene). The difference in the steric demand of the polymer end-group (Mes vs Et) transferred during the initiation step determines the topology of the resulting polymer chain. While [MesC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] exclusively yields linear poly(o-phenylene ethynylene), polymerization initiated by [EtC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] results in cyclic polymers ranging in size from n = 5 to 20 monomer units. Kinetic studies reveal that the propagating species emerging from [EtC≡Mo(OC(CH3)(CF3)2)3] undergoes a highly selective intramolecular backbiting into the butynyl end-group.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2017

Atomically precise graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions from a single molecular precursor

Giang D. Nguyen; Hsin-Zon Tsai; Arash A. Omrani; Tomas Marangoni; Meng Wu; Daniel J. Rizzo; Griffin F. Rodgers; Ryan R. Cloke; Rebecca A. Durr; Yuki Sakai; Franklin Liou; Andrew S. Aikawa; James R. Chelikowsky; Steven G. Louie; Felix R. Fischer; Michael F. Crommie

The rational bottom-up synthesis of atomically defined graphene nanoribbon (GNR) heterojunctions represents an enabling technology for the design of nanoscale electronic devices. Synthetic strategies used thus far have relied on the random copolymerization of two electronically distinct molecular precursors to yield GNR heterojunctions. Here we report the fabrication and electronic characterization of atomically precise GNR heterojunctions prepared through late-stage functionalization of chevron GNRs obtained from a single precursor. Post-growth excitation of fully cyclized GNRs induces cleavage of sacrificial carbonyl groups, resulting in atomically well-defined heterojunctions within a single GNR. The GNR heterojunction structure was characterized using bond-resolved scanning tunnelling microscopy, which enables chemical bond imaging at T = 4.5 K. Scanning tunnelling spectroscopy reveals that band alignment across the heterojunction interface yields a type II heterojunction, in agreement with first-principles calculations. GNR heterojunction band realignment proceeds over a distance less than 1 nm, leading to extremely large effective fields.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Heterostructures through Divergent Edge Reconstruction in Nitrogen-Doped Segmented Graphene Nanoribbons

Tomas Marangoni; Danny Haberer; Daniel J. Rizzo; Ryan R. Cloke; Felix R. Fischer

Atomically precise engineering of defined segments within individual graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) represents a key enabling technology for the development of advanced functional device architectures. Here, the bottom-up synthesis of chevron GNRs decorated with reactive functional groups derived from 9-methyl-9H-carbazole is reported. Scanning tunneling and non-contact atomic force microscopy reveal that a thermal activation of GNRs induces the rearrangement of the electron-rich carbazole into an electron-deficient phenanthridine. The selective chemical edge-reconstruction of carbazole-substituted chevron GNRs represents a practical strategy for the controlled fabrication of spatially defined GNR heterostructures from a single molecular precursor.


Nano Letters | 2018

Concentration Dependence of Dopant Electronic Structure in Bottom-up Graphene Nanoribbons

Zahra Pedramrazi; Chen Chen; Fangzhou Zhao; Ting Cao; Giang D. Nguyen; Arash A. Omrani; Hsin-Zon Tsai; Ryan R. Cloke; Tomas Marangoni; Daniel J. Rizzo; Trinity Joshi; Christopher Bronner; Won-Woo Choi; Felix R. Fischer; Steven G. Louie; Michael F. Crommie

Bottom-up fabrication techniques enable atomically precise integration of dopant atoms into the structure of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). Such dopants exhibit perfect alignment within GNRs and behave differently from bulk semiconductor dopants. The effect of dopant concentration on the electronic structure of GNRs, however, remains unclear despite its importance in future electronics applications. Here we use scanning tunneling microscopy and first-principles calculations to investigate the electronic structure of bottom-up synthesized N = 7 armchair GNRs featuring varying concentrations of boron dopants. First-principles calculations of freestanding GNRs predict that the inclusion of boron atoms into a GNR backbone should induce two sharp dopant states whose energy splitting varies with dopant concentration. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy experiments, however, reveal two broad dopant states with an energy splitting greater than expected. This anomalous behavior results from an unusual hybridization between the dopant states and the Au(111) surface, with the dopant-surface interaction strength dictated by the dopant orbital symmetry.


Archive | 2016

CHAPTER 8: Aromatic Molecules on Metallic Surfaces: Structure and Reactivity

Tomas Marangoni; Ryan R. Cloke; Felix R. Fischer

In this chapter, a decade-long series of investigations about aromatic molecules on metallic surfaces has been reviewed. The most relevant studies regarding both structural investigation and chemical reactivity of aromatic systems on a metallic surface are described. A major emphasis has been placed on the investigation techniques that allow for a direct visualization of the structural and electronic properties of both isolated and extended aromatic systems on a surface (e.g. scanning tunnelling microscopy, non-contact-atomic force microscopy and Kelvin probe force microscopy). The synthesis, imaging and characterization of structures such as an extended polyaromatic hydrocarbon, 1-D assembly, 2-D network and graphene nanoribbons are discussed. Among the different types of reactions, surface mediated reactions, such as acetylene homocoupling, cyclodehydrogenation, cycloaddition and metal-coordination, have been described.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Electronic Structure of Boron-doped Graphene Nanoribbons on Metallic Substrates: Ab Initio Studies and Scanning Probe Measurements

Fangzhou Zhao; Ting Cao; Zahra Pedramrazi; Chen Chen; Giang D. Nguyen; Arash A. Omrani; Hsin-Zon Tsai; Daniel Rizzo; Trinity Joshi; Christopher Bronner; Won-Woo Choi; Ryan R. Cloke; Tomas Marangoni; Felix R. Fischer; Michael F. Crommie; Steven G. Louie


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Evolution of Electronic Localization in Bottom-up Graphene Nanoribbon Heterojunctions

Daniel Rizzo; Meng Wu; Hsin-Zon Tsai; Tomas Marangoni; Arash A. Omrani; Giang D. Nguyen; Christopher Bronner; Trinity Joshi; Danny Haberer; Ryan R. Cloke; Franklin Liou; Michael F. Crommie; Felix R. Fischer; Steven G. Louie


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Local electronic structure of atomically-precise graphene nanoribbon heterojunctions

Hsin-Zon Tsai; Giang D. Nguyen; Arash A. Omrani; Tomas Marangoni; Meng Wu; Daniel Rizzo; Griffin F. Rodgers; Ryan R. Cloke; Rebecca A. Durr; Yuki Sakai; Franklin Liou; Andrew S. Aikawa; James R. Chelikowsky; Steven G. Louie; Felix R. Fischer; Michael F. Crommie

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Michael F. Crommie

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Hsin-Zon Tsai

University of California

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Ting Cao

University of California

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Trinity Joshi

University of California

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