Stable hydrocarbon radicals are able to withstand ambient
conditions.
Their combination with a supporting surface is a promising route toward
novel functionalities or carbon-based magnetic systems. This will
remain elusive until the interplay of radical–radical interactions
and interface effects is fundamentally explored. We employ the tip
of a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope as a local probe
in combination with density functional theory calculations to investigate
with atomic precision the electronic and geometric effects of a weakly
interacting metal support on an archetypal hydrocarbon radical model
system, i.e., the exceptionally stable spin-1/2 radical α,γ-bisdiphenylene-β-phenylallyl
(BDPA). Our study demonstrates the self-assembly of stable and regular
one- and two-dimensional radical clusters on the Au(111) surface.
Different types of geometric configurations are found to result from
the interplay between the highly anisotropic radical–radical
interactions and interface effects. We investigate the interaction
mechanisms underlying the self-assembly processes and utilize the
different configurations as a geometric design parameter to demonstrate
energy shifts of up to 0.6 eV of the radicals’ frontier molecular
orbitals responsible for their electronic, magnetic, and chemical
properties.
Stable hydrocarbon radicals are utilized
as spin standards and
prototype metal-free molecular magnets able to withstand ambient conditions.
Our study presents experimental results obtained with submolecular
resolution by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy from
monomers and dimers of stable hydrocarbon π radicals adsorbed
on the Au(111) surface at 7–50 K. We provide conclusive evidence
of the preservation of the radical spin-1/2 state, aiming to establish
α,γ-bisdiphenylene-β-phenylallyl (BDPA) on Au(111)
as a novel Kondo system, where the impurity spin is localized in a
metal-free π molecular orbital of a neutral radical state in
gas phase preserved on a metal support.
We report a new type of nanomechanical resonator system based on one-dimensional chains of only 4 to 7 weakly coupled small molecules. Experimental characterization of the truly nanoscopic resonators is achieved by means of a novel radio-frequency scanning tunneling microscopy detection technique at cryogenic temperatures. Above 20 K we observe concerted oscillations of the individual molecules in chains, reminiscent of the first and second eigenmodes of a one-dimensional harmonic resonator. Radio-frequency scanning tunneling microscopy based frequency measurement reveals a characteristic length dependence of the oscillation frequency (between 51 and 127 MHz) in reasonable agreement with one-dimensional oscillator models. Our study demonstrates a new strategy for investigating and controlling the resonance properties of nanomechanical oscillators.
As more LTE bands are squeezed into the crowded global RF spectrum interference becomes a major concern. Some cases require profoundly steep transitions from passband to the tightly packed neighboring bands. The most demanding high frequency LTE bands may only be served with high-performance BAW resonators that have been temperature compensated to have essentially zero temperature drift. There is a variety of known challenges associated with the traditional temperature compensation techniques applied to BAW devices. This work will address those challenges and present a novel nodrift BAW-SMR using over-moded acoustic reflector layers. A solution for Band 30 utilizing the over-moded reflector will be presented.
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