Engineering interfacial quantum states and electronic landscapes by molecular nanoarchitectures
Ignacio Piquero-Zulaica, Jorge Lobo-Checa, Zakaria M. Abd El-Fattah,, J. Enrique Ortega, Florian Klappenberger, Willi Auw\"arter, Johannes V. Barth

TL;DR
This paper reviews how molecular nanoarchitectures can engineer interfacial quantum states and electronic landscapes, enabling precise control over surface electronic properties for advanced nanotechnologies.
Contribution
It introduces methods for designing molecular superlattices to tailor surface electronic states and explores their effects on physical properties at the nanoscale.
Findings
Molecular manipulation creates complex, versatile surface structures.
Artificial lattices modify surface band structures and induce quantum effects.
Guest species can further tune electronic states within nanoarchitectures.
Abstract
Surfaces are at the frontier of every known solid. They provide versatile supports for functional nanostructures and mediate essential physicochemical processes. Being intimately related with 2D materials, interfaces and atomically thin films often feature distinct electronic states with respect to the bulk, which are key for many relevant properties, such as catalytic activity, interfacial charge-transfer, or crystal growth mechanisms. Of particular interest is reducing the surface electrons' dimensionality and spread with atomic precision, to induce novel quantum properties via lateral scattering and confinement. Both atomic manipulation and supramolecular principles provide access to custom-designed molecular superlattices, which tailor the surface electronic landscape and influence fundamental chemical and physical properties at the nanoscale. Herein, we review the confinement of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Chemistry and Catalysis · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena · Machine Learning in Materials Science
