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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian Stepanow is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian Stepanow.


Topics in Current Chemistry | 2008

Surface-confined supramolecular coordination chemistry.

Nian Lin; Sebastian Stepanow; Mario Ruben; Johannes V. Barth

The non-covalent synthesis of coordination compounds and networks provides promising avenues towardsmetal-containing supermolecules and nanostructured materials with ultimate feature definition. An importantfactor for their further development, and their integration and exploitation in nanoscale functional systems,is the capability to prepare or organize them at well-defined substrates or templated environments. Supramolecularengineering on atomistically controlled surfaces has been propelled by the direct insight into low-dimensionalcoordination systems provided by scanning tunneling microscopy observations. Here we discuss the principlesof surface-confined supramolecular coordination chemistry, emphasizingself-assembly protocols conducted on surface atomic lattices employing metal centers to direct the organizationof molecular ligands and the template-induced organization of prefabricated metallosupramolecular species.The presented exemplary molecular-level studies elucidate the arrangement of organic adsorbates and transitionmetal adatoms on low-index metal and graphite surfaces. They reveal the interplay between molecule-adatom,intermolecular, and adsorbate-substrate interactions, which need to be balanced for the fabricationof low-dimensional nanostructures. The control and understanding of both the nature of metal-ligandinteractions and the resulting supramolecular organization on solid surfaces is decisive for the designof advanced architectures with concomitant functions. The realized metallosupramolecular compounds andarrays combine the properties of their constituent metal ions and organic ligands, and feature versatilestructural characteristics as well as attractive functional aspects: their redox, magnetic, spin-state,and electronic transitions.


Science | 2014

Reaching the magnetic anisotropy limit of a 3d metal atom

Ileana G. Rau; Susanne Baumann; Stefano Rusponi; Fabio Donati; Sebastian Stepanow; Luca Gragnaniello; Jan Dreiser; Cinthia Piamonteze; F. Nolting; Shruba Gangopadhyay; Oliver R. Albertini; R. M. Macfarlane; Christopher P. Lutz; B. A. Jones; Pietro Gambardella; Andreas J. Heinrich; Harald Brune

Maximizing atomic magnetic memory A study of the magnetic response of cobalt atoms adsorbed on oxide surfaces may lead to much denser storage of data. In hard drives, data are stored as magnetic bits; the magnetic field pointing up or down corresponds to storing a zero or a one. The smallest bit possible would be a single atom, but the magnetism of a single atom —its spin—has to be stabilized by interactions with heavy elements or surfaces through an effect called spin-orbit coupling. Rau et al. (see the Perspective by Khajetoorians and Wiebe) built a model system in pursuit of single-atom bits—cobalt atoms adsorbed on magnesium oxide. At temperatures approaching absolute zero, the stabilization of the spins magnetic direction reached the maximum that is theoretically possible. Science, this issue p. 988; see also p. 976 A cobalt atom bound to a single oxygen site on magnesia has the maximum magnetic anisotropy allowed for a transition metal [Also see Perspective by Khajetoorians and Wiebe] Designing systems with large magnetic anisotropy is critical to realize nanoscopic magnets. Thus far, the magnetic anisotropy energy per atom in single-molecule magnets and ferromagnetic films remains typically one to two orders of magnitude below the theoretical limit imposed by the atomic spin-orbit interaction. We realized the maximum magnetic anisotropy for a 3d transition metal atom by coordinating a single Co atom to the O site of an MgO(100) surface. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy reveals a record-high zero-field splitting of 58 millielectron volts as well as slow relaxation of the Co atom’s magnetization. This striking behavior originates from the dominating axial ligand field at the O adsorption site, which leads to out-of-plane uniaxial anisotropy while preserving the gas-phase orbital moment of Co, as observed with x-ray magnetic circular dichroism.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Spin and Orbital Magnetic Moment Anisotropies of Monodispersed Bis(Phthalocyaninato)Terbium on a Copper Surface

Sebastian Stepanow; Jan Honolka; Pietro Gambardella; Lucia Vitali; Nasiba Abdurakhmanova; Tzu-Chun Tseng; Stephan Rauschenbach; Steven L. Tait; Violetta Sessi; Svetlana Klyatskaya; Mario Ruben; Klaus Kern

The magnetic properties of isolated TbPc(2) molecules supported on a Cu(100) surface are investigated by X-ray magnetic circular dichroism at 8 K in magnetic fields up to 5 T. The crystal field and magnetic properties of single molecules are found to be robust upon adsorption on a metal substrate. The Tb magnetic moment has Ising-like magnetization; XMCD spectra combined with multiplet calculations show that the saturation orbital and spin magnetic moment values reach 3 and 6 mu(B), respectively.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2008

Modular assembly of low-dimensional coordination architectures on metal surfaces

Sebastian Stepanow; Nian Lin; Johannes V. Barth

The engineering of highly organized molecular architectures has attracted strong interest because of its potential for novel materials and functional nanoscopic devices. An important factor in the development, integration, and exploitation of such systems is the capability to prepare them on surfaces or in nanostructured environments. Recent advances in supramolecular design on metal substrates provide atomistic insight into the underlying self-assembly processes, mainly by scanning tunneling microscopy observations. This review summarizes progress in noncovalent synthesis strategies under ultra-high vacuum conditions employing metal ions as coordination centers directing the molecular organization. The realized metallosupramolecular compounds and arrays combine the properties of their constituent metal ions and organic ligands, and present several attractive features: their redox, magnetic and spin-state transitions. The presented exemplary molecular level studies elucidate the arrangement of organic adsorbates on metal surfaces, demonstrating the interplay between intermolecular and molecule–substrate interactions that needs to be controlled for the fabrication of low-dimensional structures. The understanding of metallosupramolecular organization and metal–ligand interactions on solid surfaces is important for the control of structure and concomitant function.


Nature Communications | 2011

Spin coupling and relaxation inside molecule–metal contacts

Aitor Mugarza; Cornelius Krull; Roberto Robles; Sebastian Stepanow; Gustavo Ceballos; Pietro Gambardella

Advances in molecular electronics depend on the ability to control the charge and spin of single molecules at the interface with a metal. Here we show that bonding of metal-organic complexes to a metallic substrate induces the formation of coupled metal-ligand spin states, increasing the spin degeneracy of the molecules and opening multiple spin relaxation channels. Scanning tunnelling spectroscopy reveals the sign and magnitude of intramolecular exchange coupling as well as the orbital character of the spin-polarized molecular states. We observe coexisting Kondo, spin, and vibrational inelastic channels in a single molecule, which lead to pronounced intramolecular variations of the conductance and spin dynamics. The spin degeneracy of the molecules can be controlled by artificially fabricating molecular clusters of different size and shape. By comparing data for vibronic and spin-exchange excitations, we provide a positive test of the universal scaling properties of inelastic Kondo processes having different physical origin.


Science | 2016

Magnetic remanence in single atoms

Fabio Donati; Stefano Rusponi; Sebastian Stepanow; Christian Wäckerlin; Aparajita Singha; Luca Persichetti; Romana Baltic; Katharina Diller; F. Patthey; Edgar Fernandes; Jan Dreiser; Ž. Šljivančanin; Kurt Kummer; Corneliu Nistor; Pietro Gambardella; Harald Brune

Stable magnets from single atoms An important goal in molecular magnetism is to create a permanent magnet from a single atom. Metal atoms adsorbed on surfaces can develop strong magnetization in an applied field (paramagnetism). Donati et al. show that single holmium atoms adsorbed on a magnesium oxide film grown on a silver substrate show residual magnetism for temperatures up to 30 K and bistabilty that lasts for 1500 s at 10 K (see the Perspective by Khajetoorians and Heinrich). The atom avoids spin relaxation by a combination of quantum-state symmetry and by the oxide film preventing the spin from interacting with the underlying metal via tunneling. Science, this issue p. 318; see also p. 296 A single holmium atom on a magnesium oxide film can retain its magnetic moment up to 30 kelvin. [Also see Perspective by Khajetoorians and Heinrich] A permanent magnet retains a substantial fraction of its saturation magnetization in the absence of an external magnetic field. Realizing magnetic remanence in a single atom allows for storing and processing information in the smallest unit of matter. We show that individual holmium (Ho) atoms adsorbed on ultrathin MgO(100) layers on Ag(100) exhibit magnetic remanence up to a temperature of 30 kelvin and a relaxation time of 1500 seconds at 10 kelvin. This extraordinary stability is achieved by the realization of a symmetry-protected magnetic ground state and by decoupling the Ho spin from the underlying metal by a tunnel barrier.


Nature Communications | 2012

Stereoselectivity and electrostatics in charge-transfer Mn- and Cs-TCNQ 4 networks on Ag(100)

Nasiba Abdurakhmanova; A. Floris; Tzu-Chun Tseng; Alessio Comisso; Sebastian Stepanow; Alessandro De Vita; Klaus Kern

Controlling supramolecular self-assembly is a fundamental step towards molecular nanofabrication, which involves a formidable reverse engineering problem. It is known that a variety of structures are efficiently obtained by assembling appropriate organic molecules and transition metal atoms on well-defined substrates. Here we show that alkali atoms bring in new functionalities compared with transition metal atoms because of the interplay of local chemical bonding and long-range forces. Using atomic-resolution microscopy and theoretical modelling, we investigate the assembly of alkali (Cs) and transition metals (Mn) co-adsorbed with 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ) molecules, forming chiral superstructures on Ag(100). Whereas Mn-TCNQ(4) domains are achiral, Cs-TCNQ(4) forms chiral islands. The specific behaviour is traced back to the different nature of the Cs- and Mn-TCNQ bonding, opening a novel route for the chiral design of supramolecular architectures. Moreover, alkali atoms provide a means to modify the adlayer electrostatic properties, which is important for the design of metal-organic interfaces.


Nature Communications | 2013

Bio-inspired nanocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction

Doris Grumelli; Benjamin Wurster; Sebastian Stepanow; Klaus Kern

Electrochemical conversions at fuel cell electrodes are complex processes. In particular, the oxygen reduction reaction has substantial overpotential limiting the electrical power output efficiency. Effective and inexpensive catalytic interfaces are therefore essential for increased performance. Taking inspiration from enzymes, earth-abundant metal centres embedded in organic environments present remarkable catalytic active sites. Here we show that these enzyme-inspired centres can be effectively mimicked in two-dimensional metal-organic coordination networks self-assembled on electrode surfaces. Networks consisting of trimesic acid and bis-pyridyl-bispyrimidine coordinating to single iron and manganese atoms on Au(111) effectively catalyse the oxygen reduction and reveal distinctive catalytic activity in alkaline media. These results demonstrate the potential of surface-engineered metal-organic networks for electrocatalytic conversions. Specifically designed coordination complexes at surfaces inspired by enzyme cofactors represent a new class of nanocatalysts with promising applications in electrocatalysis.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

In-plane magnetic anisotropy of Fe atoms on Bi2Se3(111).

Jan Honolka; Alexander Ako Khajetoorians; V. Sessi; T. O. Wehling; Sebastian Stepanow; Jianli Mi; Bo B. Iversen; T. Schlenk; Jens Wiebe; N. B. Brookes; A. I. Lichtenstein; Ph. Hofmann; Klaus Kern; R. Wiesendanger

The robustness of the gapless topological surface state hosted by a 3D topological insulator against perturbations of magnetic origin has been the focus of recent investigations. We present a comprehensive study of the magnetic properties of Fe impurities on the prototypical 3D topological insulator Bi(2)Se(3) using local low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy and integral x-ray magnetic circular dichroism techniques. Single Fe adatoms on the Bi(2)Se(3) surface, in the coverage range ≈ 1% of a monolayer, are heavily relaxed into the surface and exhibit a magnetic easy axis within the surface plane, contrary to what was assumed in recent investigations on the supposed opening of a gap. Using ab initio approaches, we demonstrate that an in-plane easy axis arises from the combination of the crystal field and dynamic hybridization effects.


Nano Letters | 2012

Exchange Biasing Single Molecule Magnets: Coupling of TbPc2 to Antiferromagnetic Layers

A. Lodi Rizzini; Cornelius Krull; T. Balashov; Aitor Mugarza; Corneliu Nistor; F. Yakhou; Violetta Sessi; Svetlana Klyatskaya; Mario Ruben; Sebastian Stepanow; Pietro Gambardella

We investigate the possibility to induce exchange bias between single molecule magnets (SMM) and metallic or oxide antiferromagnetic substrates. Element-resolved X-ray magnetic circular dichroism measurements reveal, respectively, the presence and absence of unidirectional exchange anisotropy for TbPc(2) SMM deposited on antiferromagnetic Mn and CoO layers. TbPc(2) deposited on Mn thin films present magnetic hysteresis and a negative horizontal shift of the Tb magnetization loop after field cooling, consistent with the observation of pinned spins in the Mn layer coupled parallel to the Tb magnetic moment. Conversely, molecules deposited on CoO substrates present paramagnetic magnetization loops with no indication of exchange bias. These experiments demonstrate the ability of SMM to polarize the pinned uncompensated spins of an antiferromagnet during field-cooling and realize metal-organic exchange-biased heterostructures using antiferromagnetic pinning layers.

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Nian Lin

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Mario Ruben

University of Strasbourg

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Aitor Mugarza

Spanish National Research Council

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Harald Brune

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Stefano Rusponi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Cornelius Krull

Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology

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Corneliu Nistor

University of Texas at Austin

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