Artificial kagome lattices of Shockley surface states patterned by halogen hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks.
Ruoting YinXiang ZhuQiang FuTianyi HuLingyun WanYingying WuYifan LiangZhengya WangZhen-Lin QiuYuan-Zhi TanChuanxu MaShijing TanWei HuBin LiZhengfei WangJinglong YangBing WangPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Artificial electronic kagome lattices may emerge from electronic potential landscapes using customized structures with exotic supersymmetries, benefiting from the confinement of Shockley surface-state electrons on coinage metals, which offers a flexible approach to realizing intriguing quantum phases of matter that are highly desired but scarce in available kagome materials. Here, we devise a general strategy to construct varieties of electronic kagome lattices by utilizing the on-surface synthesis of halogen hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (XHOFs). As a proof of concept, we demonstrate three XHOFs on Ag(111) and Au(111) surfaces, which correspondingly deliver regular, breathing, and chiral breathing diatomic-kagome lattices with patterned potential landscapes, showing evident topological edge states at the interfaces. The combination of scanning tunnelling microscopy and noncontact atomic force microscopy, complemented by density functional theory and tight-binding calculations, directly substantiates our method as a reliable and effective way to achieve electronic kagome lattices for engineering quantum states.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- atomic force microscopy
- high resolution
- high speed
- single molecule
- human health
- visible light
- monte carlo
- optical coherence tomography
- high throughput
- ionic liquid
- mass spectrometry
- sensitive detection
- binding protein
- water soluble
- biofilm formation
- staphylococcus aureus
- health risk assessment
- reduced graphene oxide