Self-organized Kagome-lattice in a metal-organic monolayer
Nesrine Shaiek, Hassan Denawi, Mathieu Koudia, Roland Hayn, Steffen, Sch\"afer, Isabelle Berbezier, Chokri Lamine, Olivier Siri, Abdelwaheb, Akremi, Mathieu Abel

TL;DR
This paper reports the synthesis and characterization of a metal-organic Kagome lattice monolayer with potential for quantum anomalous Hall effects, revealing its electronic, magnetic, and structural properties through experiments and calculations.
Contribution
It presents the first on-surface synthesis of a dense Kagome lattice with detailed atomic, electronic, and magnetic analysis, highlighting its ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic states.
Findings
Identified stable Mn$^{2+}$ and Cu$^+$ charge states in the lattice.
Discovered a Dirac point at the Fermi level in the band structure.
Predicted magnetic interactions suggest possible spin-liquid or ferromagnetic ground states.
Abstract
We report on the successful on-surface synthesis of metal-organic covalent coordination networks with a dense Kagome lattice of metallic centers. In the case of Mn centers ab-initio calculations show that the adsorbed monolayer on Ag(111) has all the characteristic features of a strictly two-dimensional (2D) ferromagnetic Kagome metal. Tetrahydroxyquinone (THQ) and metal atoms (M=Cu or Mn) are co-deposited on the Ag(111) substrate to build well-ordered 2D lattices MCO. The surface is studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to optimize the growth conditions like fluxes and temperatures. The details of the atomic, electronic and magnetic structures are clarified by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. XPS and DFT reveal a Cu charge state and no local magnetic moments for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Condensed Matter Physics · Surface Chemistry and Catalysis · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
