The synthesis of wafer-scale single crystal graphene remains a challenge toward the utilization of its intrinsic properties in electronics. Until now, the large-area chemical vapor deposition of graphene has yielded a polycrystalline material, where grain boundaries are detrimental to its electrical properties. Here, we study the physicochemical mechanisms underlying the nucleation and growth kinetics of graphene on copper, providing new insights necessary for the engineering synthesis of wafer-scale single crystals. Graphene arises from the crystallization of a supersaturated fraction of carbon-adatom species, and its nucleation density is the result of competition between the mobility of the carbon-adatom species and their desorption rate. As the energetics of these phenomena varies with temperature, the nucleation activation energies can span over a wide range (1-3 eV) leading to a rational prediction of the individual nuclei size and density distribution. The growth-limiting step was found to be the attachment of carbon-adatom species to the graphene edges, which was independent of the Cu crystalline orientation.
Using X-ray absorption techniques, we show that temperature-and light-induced spin crossover properties are conserved for a sub-monolayer of the [Fe(H 2 B(pz) 2 ) 2 (2,2'-bipy)] complex evaporated onto a Au(111) surface. For a significant fraction of the molecules, we see changes in the absorption at the L 2,3 edges that are consistent with those observed in bulk and thick film references. Assignment of these changes to spin crossover is further supported by multiplet calculations to simulate the x-ray absorption spectra. As others have observed in experiments on monolayer coverages, we find that many molecules in our submonolayer system remain pinned in one of the two spin states. Our results clearly demonstrate that temperature-and light-induced spin-crossover is possible for isolated molecules on surfaces, but that interactions with the surface may play a key role in determining when this can occur. TOC X-ray absorption techniques evidenced that temperature-and light-induced spin crossover properties were conserved for a sub-monolayer of the [Fe(H 2 B(pz) 2 ) 2 (2,2'-bipy)] complex evaporated on a Gold surface KEYWORDS: spin crossover,·UHV evaporation,·submonolayer,·X-ray absorption,·iron complexes 3 Spin Crossover (SCO) complexes are promising building blocks for spintronic 1 Using variable temperature X-ray absorption spectra, we examined a submonolayer coverage evaporated in situ under UHV conditions on Au(111), before and after irradiation with visible laser light. We compare these results to those obtained from two other samples: 1) a 5 single crystal finely scratched on gold foil, which we use as a spectroscopic bulk reference; and 2) a 300 nm thick film sublimedex situ on copper foil, to check the preservation of structure and properties of the complex. Experimental spectra were then compared to the ones obtained using multiplet calculations. 37-39The variation of the L 2,3 edge spectra for the bulk sample over the range of the thermal spin crossover (100-300 K) is reported in Figure 1a(see also Figure S1 in Supplementary Information Spectra measured on the thick film prepared ex situ are similar to the bulk, and show comparable temperature dependence (Figure 1b and Figure S1). Nevertheless, the thick film spectrum is slightly differentfrom the bulk compound: shoulders on the high-energy side (at 300 K) or at the low-energy side (at 100 K) of the L 3 absorption peak, are likely associated with a small fraction of decomposition product, which maybe caused by air exposure of this sample prepared ex situ.The analysis of the temperature-dependent spectra as weighted sums of the bulk spectra at 300 K and 100 K, chosen as representative of the HS and LS state respectively, allows for the extraction of the temperature dependence of the HS fraction (Table S2). For the thick film, the shoulder signals were found to be temperature independent, and thus do not affect the switching behavior. We extracted this spurious contribution ( Figures S3 and S4) and subtracted it from all spectra before evaluating...
The properties of quantum systems interacting with their environment, commonly called open quantum systems, can be affected strongly by this interaction. Although this can lead to unwanted consequences, such as causing decoherence in qubits used for quantum computation, it can also be exploited as a probe of the environment. For example, magnetic resonance imaging is based on the dependence of the spin relaxation times of protons in water molecules in a host's tissue. Here we show that the excitation energy of a single spin, which is determined by magnetocrystalline anisotropy and controls its stability and suitability for use in magnetic data-storage devices, can be modified by varying the exchange coupling of the spin to a nearby conductive electrode. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, we observe variations up to a factor of two of the spin excitation energies of individual atoms as the strength of the spin's coupling to the surrounding electronic bath changes. These observations, combined with calculations, show that exchange coupling can strongly modify the magnetic anisotropy. This system is thus one of the few open quantum systems in which the energy levels, and not just the excited-state lifetimes, can be renormalized controllably. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, a property normally determined by the local structure around a spin, can be tuned electronically. These effects may play a significant role in the development of spintronic devices in which an individual magnetic atom or molecule is coupled to conducting leads.
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