Sylwia Nowakowska
University of Basel
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sylwia Nowakowska.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Aneliia Shchyrba; Manh Thuong Nguyen; Christian Wäckerlin; Susanne C. Martens; Sylwia Nowakowska; Toni Ivas; Jesse Roose; Thomas Nijs; Serpil Boz; Michael Schär; Meike Stöhr; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Carlo Thilgen; François Diederich; Daniele Passerone; Thomas A. Jung
Chiral recognition as well as chirality transfer in supramolecular self-assembly and on-surface coordination is studied for the enantiopure 6,13-dicyano[7]helicene building block. It is remarkable that, with this helical molecule, both H-bonded chains and metal-coordinated chains can be formed on the same substrate, thereby allowing for a direct comparison of the chain bonding motifs and their effects on the self-assembly in experiment and theory. Conformational flexure and both adsorbate/adsorbent and intermolecular interactions can be identified as factors influencing the chiral recognition at the binding site. The observed H-bonded chains are chiral, however, the overall appearance of Cu-coordinated chains is no longer chiral. The study was performed via scanning tunneling microscopy, X-ray-photoelectron spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. We show a significant influence of the molecular flexibility and the type of bonding motif on the chirality transfer in the 1D self-assembly.
Nature Communications | 2016
Shigeki Kawai; Adam S. Foster; Torbjörn Björkman; Sylwia Nowakowska; Jonas Björk; Filippo Federici Canova; Lutz H. Gade; Thomas A. Jung; Ernst Meyer
Van der Waals forces are among the weakest, yet most decisive interactions governing condensation and aggregation processes and the phase behaviour of atomic and molecular matter. Understanding the resulting structural motifs and patterns has become increasingly important in studies of the nanoscale regime. Here we measure the paradigmatic van der Waals interactions represented by the noble gas atom pairs Ar–Xe, Kr–Xe and Xe–Xe with a Xe-functionalized tip of an atomic force microscope at low temperature. Individual rare gas atoms were fixed at node sites of a surface-confined two-dimensional metal–organic framework. We found that the magnitude of the measured force increased with the atomic radius, yet detailed simulation by density functional theory revealed that the adsorption induced charge redistribution strengthened the van der Waals forces by a factor of up to two, thus demonstrating the limits of a purely atomic description of the interaction in these representative systems.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Aneliia Shchyrba; Christian Wäckerlin; Jan Nowakowski; Sylwia Nowakowska; Jonas Björk; Shadi Fatayer; Jan Girovsky; Thomas Nijs; Susanne C. Martens; Armin Kleibert; Meike Stöhr; Nirmalya Ballav; Thomas A. Jung; Lutz H. Gade
The formation of on-surface coordination polymers is controlled by the interplay of chemical reactivity and structure of the building blocks, as well as by the orientating role of the substrate registry. Beyond the predetermined patterns of structural assembly, the chemical reactivity of the reactants involved may provide alternative pathways in their aggregation. Organic molecules, which are transformed in a surface reaction, may be subsequently trapped via coordination of homo- or heterometal adatoms, which may also play a role in the molecular transformation. The amino-functionalized perylene derivative, 4,9-diaminoperylene quinone-3,10-diimine (DPDI), undergoes specific levels of dehydrogenation (-1 H2 or -3 H2) depending on the nature of the present adatoms (Fe, Co, Ni or Cu). In this way, the molecule is converted to an endo- or an exoligand, possessing a concave or convex arrangement of ligating atoms, which is decisive for the formation of either 1D or 2D coordination polymers.
Nature Communications | 2015
Sylwia Nowakowska; Aneliia Wäckerlin; Shigeki Kawai; Toni Ivas; Jan Nowakowski; Shadi Fatayer; Christian Wäckerlin; Thomas Nijs; Ernst Meyer; Jonas Björk; Meike Stöhr; Lutz H. Gade; Thomas A. Jung
Condensation processes are of key importance in nature and play a fundamental role in chemistry and physics. Owing to size effects at the nanoscale, it is conceptually desired to experimentally probe the dependence of condensate structure on the number of constituents one by one. Here we present an approach to study a condensation process atom-by-atom with the scanning tunnelling microscope, which provides a direct real-space access with atomic precision to the aggregates formed in atomically defined ‘quantum boxes’. Our analysis reveals the subtle interplay of competing directional and nondirectional interactions in the emergence of structure and provides unprecedented input for the structural comparison with quantum mechanical models. This approach focuses on—but is not limited to—the model case of xenon condensation and goes significantly beyond the well-established statistical size analysis of clusters in atomic or molecular beams by mass spectrometry.
Nature Communications | 2017
Jan Girovsky; Jan Nowakowski; Md. Ehesan Ali; Milos Baljozovic; H.R. Rossmann; Thomas Nijs; Elise Aeby; Sylwia Nowakowska; Dorota Siewert; Gitika Srivastava; Christian Wäckerlin; Jan Dreiser; Silvio Decurtins; Shi-Xia Liu; Peter M. Oppeneer; Thomas A. Jung; Nirmalya Ballav
Realization of long-range magnetic order in surface-supported two-dimensional systems has been challenging, mainly due to the competition between fundamental magnetic interactions as the short-range Kondo effect and spin-stabilizing magnetic exchange interactions. Spin-bearing molecules on conducting substrates represent a rich platform to investigate the interplay of these fundamental magnetic interactions. Here we demonstrate the direct observation of long-range ferrimagnetic order emerging in a two-dimensional supramolecular Kondo lattice. The lattice consists of paramagnetic hexadeca-fluorinated iron phthalocyanine (FeFPc) and manganese phthalocyanine (MnPc) molecules co-assembled into a checkerboard pattern on single-crystalline Au(111) substrates. Remarkably, the remanent magnetic moments are oriented in the out-of-plane direction with significant contribution from orbital moments. First-principles calculations reveal that the FeFPc-MnPc antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbour coupling is mediated by the Ruderman–Kittel–Kasuya–Yosida exchange interaction via the Au substrate electronic states. Our findings suggest the use of molecular frameworks to engineer novel low-dimensional magnetically ordered materials and their application in molecular quantum devices.
Nano Letters | 2017
Aneliia Wäckerlin; Shadi Fatayer; Thomas Nijs; Sylwia Nowakowska; S. Fatemeh Mousavi; Olha Popova; Aisha Ahsan; Thomas A. Jung; Christian Wäckerlin
We show that highly ordered two-dimensional (2D) chessboard arrays consisting of a periodic arrangement of two different molecules can be obtained by self-assembly of unsubstituted metal-phthalocyanines (metal-Pcs) on a suitable substrate serving as the template. Specifically, CuPc + MnPc and CuPc + CoPc mixtures sort into highly ordered Cu/Mn and Cu/Co chessboard arrays on the square p(10 × 10) reconstruction of bismuth on Cu(100). Such created bimolecular chessboard assemblies emerge from the site-specific interactions between the central transition-metal ions and the periodically reconstructed substrate. This work provides a conceptually new approach to induce 2D chessboard patterns in that no functionalization of the molecules is needed.
Small | 2016
Sylwia Nowakowska; Aneliia Wäckerlin; Ignacio Piquero-Zulaica; Jan Nowakowski; Shigeki Kawai; Christian Wäckerlin; Manfred Matena; Thomas Nijs; Shadi Fatayer; Olha Popova; Aisha Ahsan; S. Fatemeh Mousavi; Toni Ivas; Ernst Meyer; Meike Stöhr; J. Enrique Ortega; Jonas Björk; Lutz H. Gade; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Thomas A. Jung
A 2D array of electronically coupled quantum boxes is fabricated by means of on-surface self-assembly assuring ultimate precision of each box. The quantum states embedded in the boxes are configured by adsorbates, whose occupancy is controlled with atomic precision. The electronic interbox coupling can be maintained or significantly reduced by proper arrangement of empty and filled boxes.
ACS Nano | 2018
Sylwia Nowakowska; Federico Mazzola; Mariza N. Alberti; Fei Song; Tobias Voigt; Jan Nowakowski; Aneliia Wäckerlin; Christian Wäckerlin; Jérôme Wiss; W. Bernd Schweizer; Max Broszio; C. M. Polley; M. Leandersson; Shadi Fatayer; Toni Ivas; Milos Baljozovic; S. Fatemeh Mousavi; Aisha Ahsan; Thomas Nijs; Olha Popova; Jun Zhang; Matthias Muntwiler; Carlo Thilgen; Meike Stöhr; Igor A. Pašti; Natalia V. Skorodumova; François Diederich; Justin W. Wells; Thomas A. Jung
Quantum devices depend on addressable elements, which can be modified separately and in their mutual interaction. Self-assembly at surfaces, for example, formation of a porous (metal-) organic network, provides an ideal way to manufacture arrays of identical quantum boxes, arising in this case from the confinement of the electronic (Shockley) surface state within the pores. We show that the electronic quantum box state as well as the interbox coupling can be modified locally to a varying extent by a selective choice of adsorbates, here C60, interacting with the barrier. In view of the wealth of differently acting adsorbates, this approach allows for engineering quantum states in on-surface network architectures.
Chemical Communications | 2014
Jun Zhang; Aneliia Shchyrba; Sylwia Nowakowska; Ernst Meyer; Thomas A. Jung; Matthias Muntwiler
Chemical Communications | 2015
Thomas Nijs; Frederik J. Malzner; Shadi Fatayer; Aneliia Wäckerlin; Sylwia Nowakowska; Edwin C. Constable; Catherine E. Housecroft; Thomas A. Jung