In the present work, we report the fabrication of regular coronene (COR) clusters on surfaces in ambient conditions in the two-dimensional network formed by hexaphenylbenzene derivatives (HPB) via structural transformation. HPB could form a stable snowflake network structure on the highly oriented pyrolytic graphite surface at the air–solid interface. When COR molecules were introduced into the system, the HPB snowflake network could transform to honeycomb structures, and the COR heptamers were subsequently aggregated and entrapped into the cavity. Scanning tunneling microscopic was employed to monitor the assembly behavior of both HPB and HPB/COR at a submolecule scale level, and density functional theory calculations were utilized to reve...
The atomistic understanding of the dissociation mechanisms for large molecules adsorbed on surfaces ...
This thesis examines multiple different molecular networks adsorbed on several different substrates,...
Author Contributions (§): These authors have contributed equally. The nucleation and growth mechani...
In the present work, we report the fabrication of regular coronene (COR) clusters on surfaces in amb...
In the present investigation, we reported the fabrication of host networks formed by two newly prepa...
The spontaneous formation of supramolecular assemblies has been viewed as a potential route to the c...
10 pags., 9 figs., 4 tabs.The aggregation of coronene is relevant to understand the formation of car...
Carbon is both abundant and functionally versatile due to the variability of orbital hybridization o...
The earliest stages of soot formation in flames are believed to involve the formation of small, nano...
Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we show that coronene molecules form supramolecular structures ...
9 pags., 5 figs., 2 tabs.Coronene is one of the basic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) used t...
Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we show that coronene molecules form supramolecular structures ...
The atomistic understanding of the dissociation mechanisms for large molecules adsorbed on surfaces ...
ABSTRACT: Investigations of the self-assembly of simple molecules at the solution/solid interface ca...
Investigations of the self-assembly of simple molecules at the solution/solid interface can provide ...
The atomistic understanding of the dissociation mechanisms for large molecules adsorbed on surfaces ...
This thesis examines multiple different molecular networks adsorbed on several different substrates,...
Author Contributions (§): These authors have contributed equally. The nucleation and growth mechani...
In the present work, we report the fabrication of regular coronene (COR) clusters on surfaces in amb...
In the present investigation, we reported the fabrication of host networks formed by two newly prepa...
The spontaneous formation of supramolecular assemblies has been viewed as a potential route to the c...
10 pags., 9 figs., 4 tabs.The aggregation of coronene is relevant to understand the formation of car...
Carbon is both abundant and functionally versatile due to the variability of orbital hybridization o...
The earliest stages of soot formation in flames are believed to involve the formation of small, nano...
Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we show that coronene molecules form supramolecular structures ...
9 pags., 5 figs., 2 tabs.Coronene is one of the basic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) used t...
Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we show that coronene molecules form supramolecular structures ...
The atomistic understanding of the dissociation mechanisms for large molecules adsorbed on surfaces ...
ABSTRACT: Investigations of the self-assembly of simple molecules at the solution/solid interface ca...
Investigations of the self-assembly of simple molecules at the solution/solid interface can provide ...
The atomistic understanding of the dissociation mechanisms for large molecules adsorbed on surfaces ...
This thesis examines multiple different molecular networks adsorbed on several different substrates,...
Author Contributions (§): These authors have contributed equally. The nucleation and growth mechani...