Login / Signup

2D Ionic Liquid-Like State of Charged Rare-Earth Clusters on a Metal Surface.

Daniel TrainerAlex Taekyung LeeSanjoy SarkarVijay SinghXinyue ChengNaveen K DanduKyaw Zin LattShaoze WangTolulope Michael AjayiSineth PremarathnaDavid FacemyerLarry A CurtissSergio E UlloaAnh T NgoEric MassonSaw-Wai Hla
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Rare-earth complexes are vital for separation chemistry and useful in many advanced applications including emission and energy upconversion. Here, 2D rare-earth clusters having net charges are formed on a metal surface, enabling investigations of their structural and electronic properties on a one-cluster-at-a-time basis using scanning tunneling microscopy. While these ionic complexes are highly mobile on the surface at ≈100 K, their mobility is greatly reduced at 5 K and reveals stable and self-limiting clusters. In each cluster, a pair of charged rare-earth complexes formed by electrostatic and dispersive interactions act as a basic unit, and the clusters are chiral. Unlike other non-ionic molecular clusters formed on the surfaces, these rare-earth clusters show mechanical stability. Moreover, their high mobility on the surface suggests that they are in a 2D liquid-like state.
Keyphrases