scholarly journals From the Superatom to a Large Variety of Supermaterials: A Theoretical Study

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Julia Schacht

<p>Metal clusters have been a subject of interdisciplinary research for many years as they act as a bridge between atoms and solid-state materials. In particular, clusters that show distinct thermodynamic stability and unusual atom like behavior, with an electronic shell structure that exhibits a superatomic nature, have attracted considerable attention. The concept of clusters behaving as individual atoms and furthermore mimicking the chemistry of specific elements directly leads to the idea of using those nanoparticles as building blocks for new functional materials. Furthermore, it is interesting that one can change the properties of cluster assembled materials by solely changing the properties of the individual clusters involved.  In this work, various factors affecting superatomic assemblies are identified and critically analyzed within the means of first-principles computations. The icosahedral gold cluster Au₁₃[RS(AuSR)₂]₆ has been chosen as a model system to study the tunability of the electronic structure using single atomic impurities. In this context the doped clusters were found to be tunable such, that they reveal atomic properties, e.g. electron affinities similar to individual halogen atoms. In addition, the choice of ligands protecting the clusters is evaluated regarding the stability of the whole cluster and the involvement of the ligands in creating the superatomic structure. The latter was found to be important when thinking of orbital overlap in superatomic assemblies.  In a next step the knowledge gained is used to investigate cluster-cluster interactions and detect pairs of clusters that are good candidates to create new superatomic materials. Furthermore basic principles regarding cluster assemblies are established and partially tested in an experimental collaboration studing the structure of an Au₉(PPh₃)₈-C₆₀ assembly.  Beyond the investigation of individual gold clusters and gold cluster materials, the electronic structure of binary solid state materials consisting of ligand protected transition metal-chalcogen clusters and fullerenes, as synthesized by Roy et al., is presented. This study shows an intermediate case of non-tunable clusters and furthermore displays the partial loss of the superatomic character of the transition metal chalcogen clusters due to charge transfer.  An experimental collaboration conducted in cooperation with the research group of Prof. Beate Paulus in Berlin proceeds even further and investigates the absorption of water on non-superatomic aluminumoxo fluoride clusters.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Julia Schacht

<p>Metal clusters have been a subject of interdisciplinary research for many years as they act as a bridge between atoms and solid-state materials. In particular, clusters that show distinct thermodynamic stability and unusual atom like behavior, with an electronic shell structure that exhibits a superatomic nature, have attracted considerable attention. The concept of clusters behaving as individual atoms and furthermore mimicking the chemistry of specific elements directly leads to the idea of using those nanoparticles as building blocks for new functional materials. Furthermore, it is interesting that one can change the properties of cluster assembled materials by solely changing the properties of the individual clusters involved.  In this work, various factors affecting superatomic assemblies are identified and critically analyzed within the means of first-principles computations. The icosahedral gold cluster Au₁₃[RS(AuSR)₂]₆ has been chosen as a model system to study the tunability of the electronic structure using single atomic impurities. In this context the doped clusters were found to be tunable such, that they reveal atomic properties, e.g. electron affinities similar to individual halogen atoms. In addition, the choice of ligands protecting the clusters is evaluated regarding the stability of the whole cluster and the involvement of the ligands in creating the superatomic structure. The latter was found to be important when thinking of orbital overlap in superatomic assemblies.  In a next step the knowledge gained is used to investigate cluster-cluster interactions and detect pairs of clusters that are good candidates to create new superatomic materials. Furthermore basic principles regarding cluster assemblies are established and partially tested in an experimental collaboration studing the structure of an Au₉(PPh₃)₈-C₆₀ assembly.  Beyond the investigation of individual gold clusters and gold cluster materials, the electronic structure of binary solid state materials consisting of ligand protected transition metal-chalcogen clusters and fullerenes, as synthesized by Roy et al., is presented. This study shows an intermediate case of non-tunable clusters and furthermore displays the partial loss of the superatomic character of the transition metal chalcogen clusters due to charge transfer.  An experimental collaboration conducted in cooperation with the research group of Prof. Beate Paulus in Berlin proceeds even further and investigates the absorption of water on non-superatomic aluminumoxo fluoride clusters.</p>


Author(s):  
Chenfei Yao ◽  
Ge Shi ◽  
Yijie Hu ◽  
Hao Zhuo ◽  
Zehong Chen ◽  
...  

The development of emulsion templated functional materials has achieved great progress in the past decades in academic and industrial fields. Recently, new building blocks such as graphene, transition metal carbides...


Molecules ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (23) ◽  
pp. 4307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriele Magna ◽  
Donato Monti ◽  
Corrado Di Natale ◽  
Roberto Paolesse ◽  
Manuela Stefanelli

The interest in assembling porphyrin derivatives is widespread and is accounted by the impressive impact of these suprastructures of controlled size and shapes in many applications from nanomedicine and sensors to photocatalysis and optoelectronics. The massive use of porphyrin dyes as molecular building blocks of functional materials at different length scales relies on the interdependent pair properties, consisting of their chemical stability/synthetic versatility and their quite unique physicochemical properties. Remarkably, the driven spatial arrangement of these platforms in well-defined suprastructures can synergically amplify the already excellent properties of the individual monomers, improving conjugation and enlarging the intensity of the absorption range of visible light, or forming an internal electric field exploitable in light-harvesting and charge-and energy-transport processes. The countless potentialities offered by these systems means that self-assembly concepts and tools are constantly explored, as confirmed by the significant number of published articles related to porphyrin assemblies in the 2015–2019 period, which is the focus of this review.


RSC Advances ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (34) ◽  
pp. 19707-19711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-A Kang ◽  
Seongjun Kim ◽  
In-Su Jeon ◽  
Yi Rang Lim ◽  
Chong-Yun Park ◽  
...  

Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) such as molybdenum disulfide, have recently attracted attention for their applicability as building blocks for fabricating advanced functional materials.


1991 ◽  
Vol 234 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Pecheur ◽  
G. Toussaint

ABSTRACTThe electronic structure of Ru2Si3 has been calculated with the empirical tight binding method and the recursion procedure. The calculation strongly indicates that there exists a gap in the structure, which makes Ru2Si3 semiconducting, as found experimentally and explains the stability of the chimney-ladder phases for a valence electron concentration per transition metal atom smaller than 14.


1982 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bieber ◽  
F. GAUTIER

ABSTRACTMlultiatom interactions required in the statistical models used for the study of both the stability of ordered structures in the ground state and the chemical short range order, have been computed from the electronic structure for transition metal alloys. It is shown that : i) the most important interactions coming from “d” bands are those corresponding to self-retraced paths, the contributions of compact clusters being negligible ; ii) in general the results obtained using only second order pair interactions are valid provided that the concentration dependence of the pair interactions is taken into account. However in a few peculiar cases these results may be qualitatively modified.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Delouche ◽  
Réka Mokrai ◽  
Thierry Roisnel ◽  
Denis Tondelier ◽  
Bernard Geffroy ◽  
...  

The article presents the synthesis of a new family of naphthyl-fused phosphepines through Ni-mediated C-C coupling. Interestingly, the chloro-phosphine-oxide intermediate shows strong resistance toward oxidation/hydrolysis due to a combination of steric hindrance and pnictogen interactions. However it can undergo substitution reactions under specific conditions. The optical / redox properties and the electronic structure of these new pi-systems were studied experimentally and computationally. Taking advantage of the luminescence of these derivatives, a blue emitting OLED has been prepared highlighting that these novel pi-conjugated P-heterocycles appear as promising building blocks for solid-state lightning applications.


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