03 Fakultät Chemie
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Item Open Access Structural and electronic properties of nickelate heterostructures(2016) Wrobel, Friederike; Keimer, Bernhard (Prof. Dr.)The fabrication of thin films and multilayers has led to the discovery of novel functional properties which are widely used in electronic devices nowadays. The limit of such a material design is atomic layer-by-layer deposition which was made possible through shuttered molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth. In the course of this thesis project a newly developed oxide MBE system was used to grow two different types of nickelate heterostructures, namely superlattices (SLs) consisting of metallic and paramagnetic LaNiO3 sandwiched between a large band-gap insulator and a combination of lanthanum nickelate and cuprate layers into a single hybrid structure. The former type was intensively studied in the last years and a transition to a weakly insulating, antiferromagnetically ordered state was observed in samples where the LaNiO3 thickness had been reduced to only two unit cells. So far little was known about the influence of the growth method on the defects in the samples and consequently on their physical properties. The use of oxide MBE enabled us to improve the overall sample quality of nickelate SLs and to design a novel material. We first optimized the growth of LaNiO3 and thoroughly analyzed the heterostructures by synchrotron-based x-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and temperature-dependent electrical resistivity. Furthermore we conducted in-depth studies, including x-ray absorption and magneto-transport measurements. The knowledge gained thereby was used grow new, layered nickelate-cuprate hybrid structures with novel electronic and magnetic properties.Item Open Access Highly ordered LB films of DHAP : a donor acceptor substituted polyene(1993) Schmelzer, Michael; Roth, Siegmar; Niesert, Claus-Peter; Effenberger, Franz; Li, Rui ChengThe donor acceptor substituted polyene 5-(4-dihexadecylaminophenyl)-2-methyl-2,4-pentadienal (DHAP) is - due to its amphiphilic nature - a promising candidate for the Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) technique. The molecule was studied as a monolayer on a pure water surface under argon atmosphere. Monolayers and multilayers were transfered onto solid support. The films showed a high degree of order in the monolayer as well as in thick multilayers. LB films were investigated with polarisation dependent UV/VIS absorption spectroscopy. The film spectra showed additional absorption peaks which were not present in the spectra of the molecules in solution. The relative peak intensities were highly dependent on the orientation of the electric field vector with respect to the substrate normal. To get a detailed picture of the arrangement of the films on the molecular level, we studied the polarisation dependence of the FTIR spectra in different experimental set-ups. The spectra showed a perpendicular orientation of the conjugated system with respect to the substrate, whereas the backbone of the saturated hydrocarbon chains showed a medium tilt angle of 20.0° with respect to the substrate normal. X-ray small angle diffraction measurements were applied to investigate the thickness of the LB layers. From the position of the Bragg peaks, a thickness of 5.45 nm per bilayer can be calculated, in agreement with a bilayer model showing different molecular alignment of the molecules transferred during upstroke and downstroke.Item Open Access In situ characterization of phase evolution in LiFePO4(2015) Ohmer, Nils; Maier, Joachim (Prof. Dr.)Among the candidates for electrodes in future Li-based batteries, LiFePO4 (LFP) is one of the most important and most frequently studied materials, undergoing a phase transformation upon delithiation to FePO4 (FP). In spite of the great scientific and practical interest in this material, there is still an extensive debate on the mechanism of this phase transformation and the underlying factors of influence. Within the framework of this thesis, first studies are carried out ex situ on multi-particle, full electrode LFP materials, being electrochemically cycled and analyzed at various states of charge by a combination of highly spatially resolved methods (high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and electron energy loss spectroscopy (HRTEM, EELS)) and integral measurement techniques (analyzing the X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption near edge structure (XRD, XANES)). This combination of characterization techniques allows one to distinguish between the cycling behaviour of differently sized crystallites within the same electrode. It is found that for electrodes with hydrothermally grown LFP as active material, a particle size dependent cycling behaviour exists, with nanosized particles apparently not participating in the charging process at all. A turbostratic stacking of layers in these nanosized particles is found and identified to be responsible for sluggish lithium insertion and extraction. These higher dimensional defects prevent the small particles from participating in the charging process, most likely by disturbing the lithium diffusion along the 1-dimensional channels, as well as impair the transport along the other directions in the LFP host structure and thus blocking the lithium transport, resulting in a comparibly lower practical capacity during electrochemical cycling. To study the lithium exchange mechanism upon charging a LFP thin film cathode, an all-solid-state thin film battery cell with a lateral design concept is developed and realized by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) and thermal evaporation techniques. Using PLD and shadow masks LFP cathode, Li2O-V2O5-SiO2 (LVSO) electrolyte and LiAl anode thin films are deposited sequentially in a way that the Li transport pathway in the resulting battery is along the X-ray transparent commercial Si3N4 membrane substrate. This enables the usability of synchrotron-based energy resolved scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) with its high chemical and spatial resolution to perform in situ absorption measurements at the Fe L3 edge. Upon delithiation, a shift in the main absorption feature from 708 to 710 eV is used to fingerprint the change in the local state of charge, identifying areas containing Fe2+ (lithiated) and Fe3+ (delithiated), respectively. The initial lithiation process of a LFP thin film cathode material has been followed by in situ STXM, with a lateral resolution of 30 nm, during electrochemical charging of the thin film battery. The observed initial lithiation process does not follow the classical particle by particle mechanism, typical for multi-particle LFP cathodes, but instead a rather simultaneous, although inhomogeneous, lithiation is observed. The reason for this change in mechanism, compared to multi-particle powder electrodes, is found in mechanical interactions within the thin film upon lithiation, i.e. in the corresponding volume expansion and formation of high energy surfaces, changing the shape of the single-particle chemical potential to a monotone form upon lithiation. This has far-reaching consequences: not only the many-particle mechanism is changed to a concurrent lithiation, but also the single-particle mechanism is changed from a two-phase to a single-phase mechanism upon lithiation. Furthermore, a vanishing hysteresis loop and the disappearing of the memory effect is predicted. These findings are rather general and applicable to all kind of thin films of phase separating intercalation materials, undergoing a volume change upon lithium exchange. To fill the gap in literature on in situ observations of the (L)FP phase evolution on a single-particle level with appreciable space and time resolution, a micrometer-sized all-solid-state thin film battery is built with a defect-chemically well characterized LFP single crystal as cathode material with dimensions of 16x1x0.2 micrometer. Using STXM, the phase evolution along the fast (010) orientation is followed during in situ electrochemical (de)lithiation on a micro-meter scale with a lateral resolution of 30 nm and with minutes of time resolution. Furthermore, the STXM measurements performed on this sample are one of the few experiments ever taken on LFP materials with a well defined defect chemistry, even though fundamentally necessary for an overall understanding of the materials behaviour. This combination discloses not only the mechanism of LFP transformation on a single-particle level, but also the significance of elastic effects on the (de)lithiation process. Using a defect chemical analysis, the position of phase formation is found to be determined by the defect chemical situation, while the growth pattern of both LFP and FP is found to be dominated by elastic effects.Item Open Access Optimizing the plasma oxidation of aluminum gate electrodes for ultrathin gate oxides in organic transistors(2021) Geiger, Michael; Hagel, Marion; Reindl, Thomas; Weis, Jürgen; Weitz, R. Thomas; Solodenko, Helena; Schmitz, Guido; Zschieschang, Ute; Klauk, Hagen; Acharya, RachanaA critical requirement for the application of organic thin-film transistors (TFTs) in mobile or wearable applications is low-voltage operation, which can be achieved by employing ultrathin, high-capacitance gate dielectrics. One option is a hybrid dielectric composed of a thin film of aluminum oxide and a molecular self-assembled monolayer in which the aluminum oxide is formed by exposure of the surface of the aluminum gate electrode to a radio-frequency-generated oxygen plasma. This work investigates how the properties of such dielectrics are affected by the plasma power and the duration of the plasma exposure. For various combinations of plasma power and duration, the thickness and the capacitance of the dielectrics, the leakage-current density through the dielectrics, and the current–voltage characteristics of organic TFTs in which these dielectrics serve as the gate insulator have been evaluated. The influence of the plasma parameters on the surface properties of the dielectrics, the thin-film morphology of the vacuum-deposited organic-semiconductor films, and the resulting TFT characteristics has also been investigated.Item Open Access Development and application of embedded methods to strongly and weakly correlated systems(2022) Vitale, Eugenio; Alavi, Ali (Prof. Dr.)Coupled cluster (CC) theory is a popular and reliable tool in quantum chemistry due to its improvable hierarchy of methods able to rapidly converge to the full configuration interaction (FCI) limit in weakly correlated systems. Although it represents one of the most efficient single reference methods to treat many-body correlations with high accuracy and reliable outcomes, it yields qualitatively erroneous results when applied to strongly correlated systems. Within this thesis, the Distinguishable Cluster (DC) method (i.e., a small modification of CC amplitude equations able to qualitatively describe strongly correlated systems), is combined with FCI Quantum Monte Carlo (FCIQMC) in order to present a new tailored approach, the tailored DC (TDC), which is more accurate than the corresponding tailored CC and the pure DC. To demonstrate this, the method is first benchmarked with a variety of test cases and then further evaluated with computation of spin-state splittings in a few Fe(II) complexes. The systematic improvability of the TDC method is shown as the active space is increased. In the last part of the thesis, a further embedding scheme to treat strong correlation effects is evaluated. Specifically, the development and application of a screened Coulomb formalism is discussed. This simple approach inspired by Random Phase approximation (RPA) shows to be extremely efficient in the dissociation of one- and two-dimensional hydrogen systems.Item Open Access Shape control in wafer-based aperiodic 3D nanostructures(2014) Jeong, Hyeon-Ho; Mark, Andrew G.; Gibbs, John G.; Reindl, Thomas; Waizmann, Ulrike; Weis, Jürgen; Fischer, PeerControlled local fabrication of three-dimensional (3D) nanostructures is important to explore and enhance the function of single nanodevices, but is experimentally challenging. We present a scheme based on e-beam lithography (EBL) written seeds, and glancing angle deposition (GLAD) grown structures to create nanoscale objects with defined shapes but in aperiodic arrangements. By using a continuous sacrificial corral surrounding the features of interest we grow isolated 3D nanostructures that have complex cross-sections and sidewall morphology that are surrounded by zones of clean substrate.