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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Ules is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Ules.


Crystal Growth & Design | 2011

Epitaxially Grown Films of Standing and Lying Pentacene Molecules on Cu(110) Surfaces

Tatjana Djuric; Thomas Ules; Heinz-Georg Flesch; Harald Plank; Quan Shen; Christian Teichert; Roland Resel; M.G. Ramsey

Here, it is shown that pentacene thin films (30 nm) with distinctively different crystallographic structures and molecular orientations can be grown under essentially identical growth conditions in UHV on clean Cu(110) surfaces. By X-ray diffraction, we show that the epitaxially oriented pentacene films crystallize either in the “thin film” phase with standing molecules or in the “single crystal” structure with molecules lying with their long axes parallel to the substrate. The morphology of the samples observed by atomic force microscopy shows an epitaxial alignment of pentacene crystallites, which corroborates the molecular orientation observed by X-ray diffraction pole figures. Low energy electron diffraction measurements reveal that these dissimilar growth behaviors are induced by subtle differences in the monolayer structures formed by slightly different preparation procedures.


EPL | 2012

Orbital tomography for highly symmetric adsorbate systems

Benjamin Stadtmüller; Martin Willenbockel; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; François C. Bocquet; Serguei Soubatch; Peter Puschnig; Georg Koller; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz; Christian Kumpf

Orbital tomography is a new and very powerful tool to analyze the angular distribution of a photoemission spectroscopy experiment. It was successfully used for organic adsorbate systems to identify (and consequently deconvolute) the contributions of specific molecular orbitals to the photoemission data. The technique was so far limited to surfaces with low symmetry like fcc(110) oriented surfaces, owing to the small number of rotational domains that occur on such surfaces. In this letter we overcome this limitation and present an orbital tomography study of a 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetra-carboxylic-dianhydride (PTCDA) monolayer film adsorbed on Ag(111). Although this system exhibits twelve differently oriented molecules, the angular resolved photoemission data still allow a meaningful analysis of the different local density of states and reveal different electronic structures for symmetrically inequivalent molecules. We also discuss the precision of the orbital tomography technique in terms of counting statistics and linear regression fitting algorithm. Our results demonstrate that orbital tomography is not limited to low-symmetry surfaces, a finding which makes a broad field of complex adsorbate systems accessible to this powerful technique.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Imaging the wave functions of adsorbed molecules

Daniel Lüftner; Thomas Ules; Eva Maria Reinisch; Georg Koller; Serguei Soubatch; F. Stefan Tautz; M.G. Ramsey; Peter Puschnig

Significance In quantum mechanics, the electrons in a molecule are described by a mathematical object termed the wave function or molecular orbital. This function determines the chemical and physical properties of matter and consequently there has been much interest in measuring orbitals, despite the fact that strictly speaking they are not quantum-mechanical observables. We show how the amplitude and phase of orbitals can be measured in good agreement with wave functions from ab initio calculations. Not only do such measurements allow wave functions of complex molecules and nanostructures to be determined, they also open up a window into critical discussions of theoretical orbital concepts. The basis for a quantum-mechanical description of matter is electron wave functions. For atoms and molecules, their spatial distributions and phases are known as orbitals. Although orbitals are very powerful concepts, experimentally only the electron densities and -energy levels are directly observable. Regardless whether orbitals are observed in real space with scanning probe experiments, or in reciprocal space by photoemission, the phase information of the orbital is lost. Here, we show that the experimental momentum maps of angle-resolved photoemission from molecular orbitals can be transformed to real-space orbitals via an iterative procedure which also retrieves the lost phase information. This is demonstrated with images obtained of a number of orbitals of the molecules pentacene (C22H14) and perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic dianhydride (C24H8O6), adsorbed on silver, which are in excellent agreement with ab initio calculations. The procedure requires no a priori knowledge of the orbitals and is shown to be simple and robust.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Energy offsets within a molecular monolayer: the influence of the molecular environment

Martin Willenbockel; Benjamin Stadtmüller; K. Schönauer; François C. Bocquet; Daniel Lüftner; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; Georg Koller; Christian Kumpf; Serguei Soubatch; Peter Puschnig; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz

The compressed 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) herringbone monolayer structure on Ag(110) is used as a model system to investigate the role of molecule–molecule interactions at metal–organic interfaces. By means of the orbital tomography technique, we can not only distinguish the two inequivalent molecules in the unit cell but also resolve their different energy positions for the highest occupied and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals. Density functional theory calculations of a freestanding PTCDA layer identify the electrostatic interaction between neighboring molecules, rather than the adsorption site, as the main reason for the molecular level splitting observed experimentally.


Physical Review B | 2014

Orbital tomography of hybridized and dispersing molecular overlayers

Thomas Ules; Daniel Lüftner; Eva Maria Reinisch; Georg Koller; Peter Puschnig; M.G. Ramsey

With angle resolved photoemission experiments and \emph{ab-initio} electronic structure calculations, the pentacene monolayers on Ag(110) and Cu(110) are compared and contrasted allowing the molecular orientation and an unambiguous assignment of emissions to specific orbitals to be made. On Ag(110), the orbitals remain essentially isolated-molecule like, while strong substrate-enhanced dispersion and orbital modification are observed upon adsorption on Cu(110). We show how the photoemission intensity of extended systems can be simulated and that it behaves essentially like that of the isolated molecule modulated by the band dispersion due to intermolecular interactions.


Nature Communications | 2015

Exploring three-dimensional orbital imaging with energy-dependent photoemission tomography

Simon Weiß; Daniel Lüftner; Thomas Ules; E. M. Reinisch; H. Kaser; Alexander Gottwald; M. Richter; Serguei Soubatch; Georg Koller; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz; Peter Puschnig

Recently, it has been shown that experimental data from angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy on oriented molecular films can be utilized to retrieve real-space images of molecular orbitals in two dimensions. Here, we extend this orbital tomography technique by performing photoemission initial state scans as a function of photon energy on the example of the brickwall monolayer of 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA) on Ag(110). The overall dependence of the photocurrent on the photon energy can be well accounted for by assuming a plane wave for the final state. However, the experimental data, both for the highest occupied and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital of PTCDA, exhibits an additional modulation attributed to final state scattering effects. Nevertheless, as these effects beyond a plane wave final state are comparably small, we are able, with extrapolations beyond the attainable photon energy range, to reconstruct three-dimensional images for both orbitals in agreement with calculations for the adsorbed molecule.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Energy Ordering of Molecular Orbitals

Peter Puschnig; A. D. Boese; Martin Willenbockel; M. Meyer; Daniel Lüftner; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; Georg Koller; Serguei Soubatch; M.G. Ramsey; F. S. Tautz

Orbitals are invaluable in providing a model of bonding in molecules or between molecules and surfaces. Most present-day methods in computational chemistry begin by calculating the molecular orbitals of the system. To what extent have these mathematical objects analogues in the real world? To shed light on this intriguing question, we employ a photoemission tomography study on monolayers of 3,4,9,10-perylene-tetracarboxylic acid dianhydride (PTCDA) grown on three Ag surfaces. The characteristic photoelectron angular distribution enables us to assign individual molecular orbitals to the emission features. When comparing the resulting energy positions to density functional calculations, we observe deviations in the energy ordering. By performing complete active space calculations (CASSCF), we can explain the experimentally observed orbital ordering, suggesting the importance of static electron correlation beyond a (semi)local approximation. On the other hand, our results also show reality and robustness of the orbital concept, thereby making molecular orbitals accessible to experimental observations.


ACS Nano | 2017

Charge Transfer and Orbital Level Alignment at Inorganic/Organic Interfaces: The Role of Dielectric Interlayers

Michael Hollerer; Daniel Lüftner; Philipp Hurdax; Thomas Ules; Serguei Soubatch; F. S. Tautz; Georg Koller; Peter Puschnig; Martin Sterrer; M.G. Ramsey

It is becoming accepted that ultrathin dielectric layers on metals are not merely passive decoupling layers, but can actively influence orbital energy level alignment and charge transfer at interfaces. As such, they can be important in applications ranging from catalysis to organic electronics. However, the details at the molecular level are still under debate. In this study, we present a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon of charge transfer promoted by a dielectric interlayer with a comparative study of pentacene adsorbed on Ag(001) with and without an ultrathin MgO interlayer. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and photoemission tomography supported by density functional theory, we are able to identify the orbitals involved and quantify the degree of charge transfer in both cases. Fractional charge transfer occurs for pentacene adsorbed on Ag(001), while the presence of the ultrathin MgO interlayer promotes integer charge transfer with the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital transforming into a singly occupied and singly unoccupied state separated by a large gap around the Fermi energy. Our experimental approach allows a direct access to the individual factors governing the energy level alignment and charge-transfer processes for molecular adsorbates on inorganic substrates.


Physical Review B | 2011

Orbital tomography: Deconvoluting photoemission spectra of organic molecules

Peter Puschnig; E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; Georg Koller; Serguei Soubatch; Markus Ostler; Lorenz Romaner; F. S. Tautz; Claudia Ambrosch-Draxl; M.G. Ramsey


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Development and character of gap states on alkali doping of molecular films

E. M. Reinisch; Thomas Ules; Peter Puschnig; S. Berkebile; Markus Ostler; Thomas Seyller; M.G. Ramsey; Georg Koller

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F. S. Tautz

Jacobs University Bremen

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Roland Resel

Graz University of Technology

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