Ulises Santiago
University of Texas at San Antonio
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Featured researches published by Ulises Santiago.
Science | 2015
Andrew J. Mannix; Xiang-Feng Zhou; Brian Kiraly; Joshua D. Wood; Diego Alducin; Benjamin D. Myers; Xiaolong Liu; Brandon Fisher; Ulises Santiago; Jeffrey R. Guest; Miguel José Yacamán; Arturo Ponce; Artem R. Oganov; Mark C. Hersam; Nathan P. Guisinger
Borophene: Boron in two dimensions Although bulk allotropes of carbon and boron differ greatly, small clusters of these elements show remarkable similarities. Boron analogs of two-dimensional carbon allotropes such as graphene have been predicted. Now Mannix et al. report the formation of two-dimensional boron by depositing the elemental boron onto a silver surface under ultrahigh-vacuum conditions (see the Perspective by Sachdev). The graphene-like structure was buckled, weakly bonded to the substrate, and metallic. Science, this issue p. 1513; see also p. 1468 A two-dimensional boron allotrope forms after depositing its elemental vapor on a silver surface in vacuum. [Also see Perspective by Sachdev] At the atomic-cluster scale, pure boron is markedly similar to carbon, forming simple planar molecules and cage-like fullerenes. Theoretical studies predict that two-dimensional (2D) boron sheets will adopt an atomic configuration similar to that of boron atomic clusters. We synthesized atomically thin, crystalline 2D boron sheets (i.e., borophene) on silver surfaces under ultrahigh-vacuum conditions. Atomic-scale characterization, supported by theoretical calculations, revealed structures reminiscent of fused boron clusters with multiple scales of anisotropic, out-of-plane buckling. Unlike bulk boron allotropes, borophene shows metallic characteristics that are consistent with predictions of a highly anisotropic, 2D metal.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013
Alfredo Tlahuice-Flores; Ulises Santiago; Daniel Bahena; Ekaterina Vinogradova; Cecil V. Conroy; Tarushee Ahuja; Stephan B. H. Bach; Arturo Ponce; Gangli Wang; Miguel Jose-Yacaman; Robert L. Whetten
The structure of the recently discovered Au130-thiolate and -dithiolate clusters is explored in a combined experiment-theory approach. Rapid electron diffraction in scanning/transmission electron microscopy (STEM) enables atomic-resolution imaging of the gold core and the comparison with density functional theory (DFT)-optimized realistic structure models. The results are consistent with a 105-atom truncated-decahedral core protected by 25 short staple motifs, incorporating disulfide bridges linking the dithiolate ligands. The optimized structure also accounts, via time-dependent DFT (TD-DFT) simulation, for the distinctive optical absorption spectrum, and rationalizes the special stability underlying the selective formation of the Au130 cluster in high yield. The structure is distinct from, yet shares some features with, each of the known Au102 and Au144/Au146 systems.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015
Gilberto Casillas; Ulises Santiago; Hector Barron; Diego Alducin; Arturo Ponce; Miguel Jose-Yacaman
MoS2 has been the focus of extensive research due to its potential applications. More recently, the mechanical properties of MoS2 layers have raised interest due to applications in flexible electronics. In this article, we show in situ transmission electron microcsopy (TEM) observation of the mechanical response of a few layers of MoS2 to an external load. We used a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) tip mounted on a TEM stage to induce deformation on nanosheets of MoS2 containing few layers. The results confirm the outstanding mechanical properties on the MoS2. The layers can be bent close to 180°. However, when the tip is retrieved the initial structure is recovered. Evidence indicates that there is a significant bond reconstruction during the bending with an outstanding capability to recover the initial bond structure. The results show that flexibility of three layers of MoS2 remains the same as a single layer while increasing the bending modulus by 3 orders of magnitude. Our findings are consistent with theoretical calculations and confirm the great potential of MoS2 for applications.
Langmuir | 2013
Subarna Khanal; Gilberto Casillas; Nabraj Bhattarai; J. Jesús Velázquez-Salazar; Ulises Santiago; Arturo Ponce; Sergio Mejía-Rosales; Miguel Jose-Yacaman
Au-core, Au3Cu-alloyed shell nanoparticles passivated with CuS2 were fabricated by the polyol method, and characterized by Cs-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy. The analysis of the high-resolution micrographs reveals that these nanoparticles have decahedral structure with shell periodicity, and that each of the particles is composed by Au core and Au3Cu alloyed shell surrounded by CuS2 surface layer. X-ray diffraction measurements and results from numerical simulations confirm these findings. From the atomic resolution micrographs, we identified edge dislocations at the twin boundaries of the particles, as well as evidence of the diffusion of Cu atoms into the Au region, and the reordering of the lattice on the surface, close to the vertices of the particle. These defects will impact the atomic and electronic structures, thereby changing the physical and chemical properties of the nanoparticles. On the other hand, we show for the first time the formation of an ordered superlattice of Au3Cu and a self-capping layer made using one of the alloy metals. This has significant consequences on the physical mechanism that form multicomponent nanoparticles.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Sandra Vergara; Dylan A. Lukes; Michael W. Martynowycz; Ulises Santiago; Germán Plascencia-Villa; Simon C. Weiss; M. Jason de la Cruz; David M. Black; Marcos M. Alvarez; Xochitl Lopez-Lozano; Christopher O. Barnes; Guowu Lin; Hans Christian Weissker; Robert L. Whetten; Tamir Gonen; Miguel José Yacamán; Guillermo Calero
Solving the atomic structure of metallic clusters is fundamental to understanding their optical, electronic, and chemical properties. Herein we present the structure of the largest aqueous gold cluster, Au146(p-MBA)57 (p-MBA: para-mercaptobenzoic acid), solved by electron micro-diffraction (MicroED) to subatomic resolution (0.85 Å) and by X-ray diffraction at atomic resolution (1.3 Å). The 146 gold atoms may be decomposed into two constituent sets consisting of 119 core and 27 peripheral atoms. The core atoms are organized in a twinned FCC structure, whereas the surface gold atoms follow a C2 rotational symmetry about an axis bisecting the twinning plane. The protective layer of 57 p-MBAs fully encloses the cluster and comprises bridging, monomeric, and dimeric staple motifs. Au146(p-MBA)57 is the largest cluster observed exhibiting a bulk-like FCC structure as well as the smallest gold particle exhibiting a stacking fault.
Microscopy Research and Technique | 2014
Francisco Ruiz-Zepeda; Y. L. Casallas-Moreno; Jesus Cantu-Valle; Diego Alducin; Ulises Santiago; Miguel Jose-Yacaman; Máximo López-López; Arturo Ponce
The control growth of the cubic meta‐stable nitride phase is a challenge because of the crystalline nature of the nitrides to grow in the hexagonal phase, and accurately identifying the phases and crystal orientations in local areas of the nitride semiconductor films is important for device applications. In this study, we obtained phase and orientation maps of a metastable cubic GaN thin film using precession electron diffraction (PED) under scanning mode with a point‐to‐point 1 nm probe size beam. The phase maps revealed a cubic GaN thin film with hexagonal GaN inclusions of columnar shape. The orientation maps showed that the inclusions have nucleation sites at the cubic GaN {111} facets. Different growth orientations of the inclusions were observed due to the possibility of the hexagonal {0001} plane to grow on any different {111} cubic facet. However, the generation of the hexagonal GaN inclusions is not always due to a 60° rotation of a {111} plane. These findings show the advantage of using PED along with phase and orientation mapping, and the analysis can be extended to differently composed semiconductor thin films. Microsc. Res. Tech. 77:980–985, 2014.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015
Orlando Miramontes; Franco P. Bonafé; Ulises Santiago; Eduardo Larios-Rodríguez; J. Jesús Velázquez-Salazar; Marcelo M. Mariscal; Miguel José Yacamán
The adsorption of very small rhenium clusters (2-13 atoms) supported on graphene was studied by high-angle annular dark field-scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM). The atomic structure of the clusters was fully resolved with the aid of density functional theory calculations and STEM simulations. It was found that octahedral and tetrahedral structures work as seeds to obtain more complex morphologies. Finally, a detailed analysis of the electronic structure suggested that a higher catalytic effect can be expected in Re clusters when adsorbed on graphene than in isolated ones.
Micron | 2013
Jesus Cantu-Valle; Francisco Ruiz-Zepeda; E. Voelkl; M. Kawasaki; Ulises Santiago; Miguel Jose-Yacaman; Arturo Ponce
The purpose of this paper is to show surface irregularities in gold decahedra nanoparticles extracted by using off-axis electron holography in a JEOL ARM 200F microscope. Electron holography has been used in a dual-lens system within the objective lenses: main objective lens and objective minilens. Parameters such as biprism voltage, fringe spacing (σ), fringe width (W) and optimum fringe contrast have been calibrated. The reliability of the transmission electron microscope performance with these parameters was carried out through a plug-in in the Digital-Micrograph software, which considers the mean inner potential within the particle leading a precise determination of the morphological surface of decahedral nanoparticles obtained from the reconstructed unwrapped phase and image processing. We have also shown that electron holography has the capability to extract information from nanoparticle shape that is currently impossible to obtain with any other electron microscopy technique.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
John E. Sanchez; Ulises Santiago; Alfredo Benitez; Miguel José Yacamán; Francisco Javier González; Arturo Ponce
Detectors, photo-emitter, and other high order radiation devices work under the principle of directionality to enhance the power of emission/transmission in a particular direction. In order to understand such directionality, it is important to study their coupling mechanism of their active elements. In this work, we present a crystalline orientation analysis of ZnO nanorods grown epitaxially on the pentagonal faces of silver nanowires. The analysis of the crystalline orientation at the metal-semiconductor interface (ZnO/Ag) is performed with precession electron diffraction under assisted scanning mode. In addition, high resolution X-ray diffraction on a Bragg-Brentano configuration has been used to identify the crystalline phases of the arrangement between ZnO rods and silver nanowires. The work presented herein provides a fundamental knowledge to understand the metal-semiconductor behavior related to the receiving/transmitting mechanisms of ZnO/Ag nanoantennas.
Archive | 2015
Miguel José Yacamán; Ulises Santiago; Sergio Mejía-Rosales
The early history of scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) is reviewed as a way to frame the technical issues that make aberration correction an essential upgrade for the study of nanoparticles using STEM. The principles of aberration correction are explained, and the use of aberration-corrected microscopy in the study of nanostructures is exemplified in order to remark the features and challenges in the use of this measuring technique.