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Seminar-Peter Wahl
18/05/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Our paper published in PRL May 2011
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Colloquium - R. Moeller
28/04/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Colloquium - A. Heinrich
21/03/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar - Petr Klapetek
14/02/2011 14:00 (Zasedaci mistnost budova B) »more info

Seminar - Guy Le Lay
11/02/2011 11:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Our paper published in PRL Jan 2011
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Seminar András Berkó
15/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar Martin Svec
14/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

2nd QPlus workshop 8/10/10
2nd International QPlus Workshop 8.10.2010 »more info

Seminar Y. J. Dappe 25/5/10
25/5/2010 10:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar J. Repp 13/4/2010
14/3/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar T. Novotny 2/3/2010
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Seminar R. Martonak 23/2/10
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4/2/10 Colloquium S. Lindsay
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18/1/10 Our work highlighted on Nanotech.org website.
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30/12/09 Our paper about atomic contrast of KPFM published in PRL
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Seminar J.P. Lewis 9/12/09 14:00
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Seminar P. Kocan 25/11/09 15:00
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14.-15.10. 2009 workshop "Simultaneous STM/AFM measurements using tuning fork based sensors"
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Our paper published in PRL May 2011

Our paper "Forces and Currents in Carbon Nanostructures: Are we imaging atoms?" about atomic resolution of C-based materials has been published in Phys. Rev. Lett. link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.176101 . The paper has been chosen as Editor Suggestion's and it has been positively reviewd by E.I. Altman in Viewpoint article "Proper carbon ID required" in Physics  physics.aps.org/articles/v4/34.


The unique mechanical and electronic properties of fullerenes, nanotubes, graphene and carbon nanoribbons make them very promising materials for nanotechnological applications. In this paper, we provide a deeper understanding of the atomic-scale contrast observed on these materials with Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPMs): The Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) and the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). The simple honeycomb structure shared by these materials represents both a perfect testing ground and a fundamental challenge for scanning microscopy imaging. Graphite can be imaged with atomic resolution with SPMs even in ambient conditions but, after 25 years of research, still there is no consensus whether the maxima in the atomic scale images correspond to atoms or to the hollow sites. To tackle this long-standing problem, we performed complex first-principles calculations of forces and currents between a tip and carbon nanostructures. Our results explain the rich variety of image patterns observed in both Atomic Force Microscopy and Scanning Tunneling Microscopy experiments in terms of two factors: (i) the tip-sample distance and (ii) the chemical reactivity of the tip. Furthermore, we demonstrate that short-range chemical forces, and not van der Waals interactions, are responsible for the atomic-scale contrast, contradicting the usual interpretation of AFM experiments on carbon nanostructures.

 

References:

Martin Ondráček, Pablo Pou, Vít Rozsíval, Cesar González, Pavel Jelínek and Rubén Pérez, „Forces and currents in carbon nanostructures: Are we imaging atoms?“ Physical Review Letters 106, 176101 (2011).