The Moiré Superstructure of Graphene Intercalated with a Co Layer
ORAL
Abstract
The moiré superstructure of graphene grown on metals can drive the assembly of molecular architectures, such as metal-phthalocyanine molecules, allowing for the production of artificial molecular configurations. A detailed analysis of the Gr/Co interaction upon intercalation (including the resulting moiré pattern) is performed here by density functional theory, providing an accurate description of the template as a function of the corrugation parameters. We pay special attention to the comparison with experimental photoemission data (X-ray Photoemission Spectroscopy, XPS). We then report on empty electron states in cobalt-intercalated graphene, studied by X-ray adsorption spectroscopy and angle-resolved inverse photoemission spectroscopy. The experimental data are compared with theoretical calculations to unveil the dispersion of empty states and the hybridization of graphene π bands at the Gr/Co/Ir(111) interface.
*This work was financially supported by the European Union H2020-EINFRA-2015-1 program (Grant No. 676598 and 824143, project MaX -- MAterials at the eXascale). Computational resources were provided by the ISCRA program (IsB19 ,PHINEGAN) on the Marconi machine at CINECA.
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Presenters
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Claudia Cardoso
- S3 Center, Istituto Nanoscienze, CNR, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche