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Search for "metal surfaces" in Full Text gives 109 result(s) in Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology.

Time-resolved probing of laser-induced nanostructuring processes in liquids

  • Maximilian Spellauge,
  • David Redka,
  • Mianzhen Mo,
  • Changyong Song,
  • Heinz Paul Huber and
  • Anton Plech

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2025, 16, 968–1002, doi:10.3762/bjnano.16.74

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Published 02 Jul 2025

Changes of structural, magnetic and spectroscopic properties of microencapsulated iron sucrose nanoparticles in saline

  • Sabina Lewińska,
  • Pavlo Aleshkevych,
  • Roman Minikayev,
  • Anna Bajorek,
  • Mateusz Dulski,
  • Krystian Prusik,
  • Tomasz Wojciechowski and
  • Anna Ślawska-Waniewska

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2025, 16, 762–784, doi:10.3762/bjnano.16.59

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  • Raman spectra exhibited a similar pattern. They included a complex of bands in the 3000–2800 cm−1 region related to CHx modes and strong bands in the 1600–1000 cm−1 region. These bands originated from carboxylate and glycosidic modes, which are structurally sensitive to interactions with metal surfaces
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Published 02 Jun 2025

Facile synthesis of size-tunable L-carnosine-capped silver nanoparticles and their role in metal ion sensing and catalytic degradation of p-nitrophenol

  • Akash Kumar,
  • Ridhima Chadha,
  • Abhishek Das,
  • Nandita Maiti and
  • Rayavarapu Raja Gopal

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2024, 15, 1576–1592, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.124

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  • 94.33 mg/g at a pH of 8.5 and 0.4 g/L adsorbent [16]. These studies confirmed that ʟ-carnosine adsorbed on metal surfaces has widespread environmental applications. However, magnetic nanoparticles or MOFs coated with ʟ-carnosine were applicable only for environmental remediation but were incapable of
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Published 06 Dec 2024

Nanoarchitectonics with cetrimonium bromide on metal nanoparticles for linker-free detection of toxic metal ions and catalytic degradation of 4-nitrophenol

  • Akash Kumar and
  • Raja Gopal Rayavarapu

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2024, 15, 1312–1332, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.106

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  • environments or functional groups [3]. Surfactants bind to metal surfaces and create a stable colloidal solution by preventing the nanoparticles from aggregation or clustering [4]. CTAB is a widely used cationic surfactant that provides nanoparticle ionic stability and anisotropy [5]. Although CTAB delivers
  • synthesized using wet chemical reduction, as shown in Figure 1a. A unique feature of CTAB is its robust and selective binding to certain crystal facets of metal surfaces that define the growth and nucleation of nanoparticles. CTAB on metal surfaces plays a key role in nanoparticle stabilization but hinders
  • borohydride removed CTAB from metal surfaces for ligand exchange, which helped in the detection of heavy metal ions [32]. The impact of NaOH and NaCl was assessed regarding the stability of the synthesized metal nanoparticles at extreme concentrations (Figure 1b). The addition of 1 M NaOH at various volumes
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Published 04 Nov 2024

Interface properties of nanostructured carbon-coated biological implants: an overview

  • Mattia Bartoli,
  • Francesca Cardano,
  • Erik Piatti,
  • Stefania Lettieri,
  • Andrea Fin and
  • Alberto Tagliaferro

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2024, 15, 1041–1053, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.85

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  • bone tissues [137] to reduce wear. Such layers have been widely studied as coating agents onto several metal surfaces directly in contact with bone, including steel [138], titanium [139], and magnesium [140]. As reported by Deenoi et al. [141], CNT coatings on titanium nitride at the interface with
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Published 16 Aug 2024

Directed growth of quinacridone chains on the vicinal Ag(35 1 1) surface

  • Niklas Humberg,
  • Lukas Grönwoldt and
  • Moritz Sokolowski

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2024, 15, 556–568, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.48

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  • step decoration can be exploited to grow 1D chain-like structures of adsorbates that otherwise tend to form two-dimensional (2D) domains on flat terraces. Examples are atoms forming 1D metallic chains [11][12][13][14][15] and organic molecules forming 1D chains at step edges of vicinal metal surfaces
  • ]acridine-7,14-dione (quinacridone, QA), which forms 1D chains on flat metal surfaces already per se, on a vicinal Ag(100) surface. We describe how the presence of the step edges influences the azimuthal orientations of the chains. QA is a good candidate for such experiments because strong intermolecular
  • vicinal metal surfaces [17][18]. This shows that the contribution of the interactions between the atoms of the step edges and the organic molecules to the adsorption energy of the molecules is a common and important motif for the adsorption and self-assembly of organic molecules on stepped surfaces. We
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Published 21 May 2024

Multiscale modelling of biomolecular corona formation on metallic surfaces

  • Parinaz Mosaddeghi Amini,
  • Ian Rouse,
  • Julia Subbotina and
  • Vladimir Lobaskin

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2024, 15, 215–229, doi:10.3762/bjnano.15.21

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  • the proteins. Each heatmap is accompanied by a 3D representation of the protein on the NP surface, with the AAs closest to the NP’s surface marked. The AAs that are most likely to make contact with the metal surfaces, according to analysis, are LYS, TYR, PHE, GLU, ARG, and ASP. The rankings of protein
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Published 13 Feb 2024

Two-dimensional molecular networks at the solid/liquid interface and the role of alkyl chains in their building blocks

  • Suyi Liu,
  • Yasuo Norikane and
  • Yoshihiro Kikkawa

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2023, 14, 872–892, doi:10.3762/bjnano.14.72

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  • flat conducting substrates, such as metal surfaces and highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions, at solid/air or solid/liquid interfaces [23][24][25][26][27][28]. Although UHV-STM offers high-resolution imaging, it requires large, complex, and expensive
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Published 23 Aug 2023

Molecular nanoarchitectonics: unification of nanotechnology and molecular/materials science

  • Katsuhiko Ariga

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2023, 14, 434–453, doi:10.3762/bjnano.14.35

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  • substrate. This process resulted in the formation of heterowires in which the polymer initially formed on the substrate was linked to another type of thiophene polymer that was growing. In this way, nanoarchitectonics of conjugated polymers can be obtained on metal surfaces by multistep electrochemical
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Published 03 Apr 2023

From a free electron gas to confined states: A mixed island of PTCDA and copper phthalocyanine on Ag(111)

  • Alfred J. Weymouth,
  • Emily Roche and
  • Franz J. Giessibl

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 1572–1577, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.131

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  • coverage, lies flat on metal surfaces. Submonolayer coverage of PTCDA on Ag(111) is known to form islands with a herringbone reconstruction [3][4]. These islands are hosts to an interface state that acts like a free-electron gas [5]. This interface state has been observed with two-photon photoelectron
  • Information File 1. A natural complement to PTCDA is copper phthalocyanine (CuPc) for several reasons: First, CuPc and PTCDA together can form an organic light-emitting diode with PTCDA as the acceptor [14]. Second, CuPc [15] and PTCDA both lie flat on metal surfaces at submonolayer coverage, enabling high
  • -precision STM and atomic force microscopy (AFM) scanning. Third, CuPc and PTCDA are known to form commensurate phases on flat metal surfaces. In particular, they have been well studied at different stoichiometries on Ag(111) [16]. Henneke and co-workers showed that more than 0.15 ML of PTCDA in addition to
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Published 22 Dec 2022

Laser-processed antiadhesive bionic combs for handling nanofibers inspired by nanostructures on the legs of cribellate spiders

  • Sebastian Lifka,
  • Kristóf Harsányi,
  • Erich Baumgartner,
  • Lukas Pichler,
  • Dariya Baiko,
  • Karsten Wasmuth,
  • Johannes Heitz,
  • Marco Meyer,
  • Anna-Christin Joel,
  • Jörn Bonse and
  • Werner Baumgartner

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 1268–1283, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.105

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  • sticking of an artificially nonwoven of nanofibers. According to the theoretical prediction, a technical analogon of the nanoripples was produced by ultrashort pulse laser processing on different technically relevant metal surfaces in the form of so-called laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS
  • structures (LIPSS) [29] represent a technical analogon of the nanoripples found on the calamistrum of the spider. They were produced by ultrashort pulse laser processing on different technically relevant metal surfaces (aluminium alloy, steel, and titanium alloy) according to theoretical predictions
  • amplitude a and λ is too low, the surface becomes even more adhesive for nanofibers than flat surfaces. Figure 5 shows the above-described effect for a fiber radius R = 15 nm and different characteristic lengths λ. Design and test of LIPSS-covered metal surfaces that are anti-adhesive for electrospun PA-6
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Published 07 Nov 2022

Design of surface nanostructures for chirality sensing based on quartz crystal microbalance

  • Yinglin Ma,
  • Xiangyun Xiao and
  • Qingmin Ji

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 1201–1219, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.100

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  • QCM system, which include organic molecules, supermolecular assemblies, inorganic nanostructures, and metal surfaces. The sensing mechanisms based on these surface nanostructures and the related potentials for chiral detection by the QCM system are also summarized. Keywords: assembled nanostructure
  • that metal surfaces may be an ideal platform to study the dynamic chiral recognition process. The adsorption orientations of the two enantiomers may have clear differences on the chiral metal surface, which makes the binding energy of enantiomers different on the crystalline surface. Dong and Wang et
  • strengthened. This work presented the great potential of bare metal surfaces as an effective platform for chirality detection. Metals are not only more stable than organic materials in various usage conditions, but also have excellent optical, electrical, and magnetic properties. They may facilitate the design
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Published 27 Oct 2022

Effects of focused electron beam irradiation parameters on direct nanostructure formation on Ag surfaces

  • Jānis Sniķeris,
  • Vjačeslavs Gerbreders,
  • Andrejs Bulanovs and
  • Ēriks Sļedevskis

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 1004–1010, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.87

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  • plasmonics, due to their ability to absorb or emit light at frequencies which depend on their size and shape. It was recently shown that irradiation by a focused electron beam can promote the growth of nanostructures on metal surfaces and the height of these structures depends on the duration of the
  • nanopatterning of metal surfaces, but it is a complicated and expensive multistep process [8]. Electron beam induced deposition (EBID) is a direct-write lithography technique, which is capable of creating 2D and free-standing 3D nanostructures by using electron irradiation to dissociate volatile precursor
  • . However, some studies suggest that this process may not always be so simple. Ueda and Yoshimura [27] reported the fabrication of free-standing nanowires on various metal surfaces (Al, Ag, Au, Cu, Pt, Ta, Ti, and W) via EBID with pump oil (hydrocarbons) as a precursor. It was observed that the substrate
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Published 22 Sep 2022

Self-assembly of C60 on a ZnTPP/Fe(001)–p(1 × 1)O substrate: observation of a quasi-freestanding C60 monolayer

  • Guglielmo Albani,
  • Michele Capra,
  • Alessandro Lodesani,
  • Alberto Calloni,
  • Gianlorenzo Bussetti,
  • Marco Finazzi,
  • Franco Ciccacci,
  • Alberto Brambilla,
  • Lamberto Duò and
  • Andrea Picone

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 857–864, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.76

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  • fullerene films stabilized directly on metal surfaces. Our results unveil a model system that could be useful in applications in which a quasi-freestanding monolayer of C60 interfaced with a metallic electrode is required. Keywords: fullerene; scanning tunneling microscopy; ultraviolet photoemission
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Published 30 Aug 2022

Zinc oxide nanostructures for fluorescence and Raman signal enhancement: a review

  • Ioana Marica,
  • Fran Nekvapil,
  • Maria Ștefan,
  • Cosmin Farcău and
  • Alexandra Falamaș

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 472–490, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.40

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  • , due to the energy and electron transfer from plasmon-resonant metal surfaces to the adjacent semiconductor. Such hybrid materials have been proposed for medical and pharmaceutical applications, catalysis, and electronics [88]. The photoluminescence emission of ZnO nanoparticles has been exploited in
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Published 27 May 2022

Relationship between corrosion and nanoscale friction on a metallic glass

  • Haoran Ma and
  • Roland Bennewitz

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2022, 13, 236–244, doi:10.3762/bjnano.13.18

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  • films form on most metal surfaces and act as a barrier to the corrosive environment, thus impeding further corrosion. The corrosion properties of MGs, for example, the ability to passivate and to remain in the passive state in corrosive aqueous solutions, have been addressed in many studies using
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Published 18 Feb 2022

Molecular assemblies on surfaces: towards physical and electronic decoupling of organic molecules

  • Sabine Maier and
  • Meike Stöhr

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 950–956, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.71

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  • layer; molecular self-assembly; scanning probe microscopy; surface science; Over the past two decades, organic molecules adsorbed on atomically defined metal surfaces have been intensively studied to obtain an in-depth understanding of their self-assembly behavior, on-surface reactivity, as well as
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Published 23 Aug 2021

Modification of a SERS-active Ag surface to promote adsorption of charged analytes: effect of Cu2+ ions

  • Bahdan V. Ranishenka,
  • Andrei Yu. Panarin,
  • Irina A. Chelnokova,
  • Sergei N. Terekhov,
  • Peter Mojzes and
  • Vadim V. Shmanai

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 902–912, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.67

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  • detection is to localize the molecules of interest at the plasmonic surface but at a proper distance (2–4 nm) [2][4]. It is a common practice to demonstrate the SERS effectivity of a SERS-active substrate by using analytes that are strongly adsorbed at the plasmonic metal surfaces and located at the “hot
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Published 16 Aug 2021

Nanogenerator-based self-powered sensors for data collection

  • Yicheng Shao,
  • Maoliang Shen,
  • Yuankai Zhou,
  • Xin Cui,
  • Lijie Li and
  • Yan Zhang

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 680–693, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.54

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  • for the design of sterilization and algae removal [72], wastewater treatment [73][74], and electrochemical corrosion protection of metal surfaces and battery cathodes [56][75][76]. TENG-based special flexible pressure sensors can be placed on the surface of human skin to monitor the physiological
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Published 08 Jul 2021

Influence of electrospray deposition on C60 molecular assemblies

  • Antoine Hinaut,
  • Sebastian Scherb,
  • Sara Freund,
  • Zhao Liu,
  • Thilo Glatzel and
  • Ernst Meyer

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 552–558, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.45

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  • different surfaces and compare, for sub-monolayer coverages, the influence of the deposition method on the formation of molecular assemblies. Whereas the island location is the main difference for metal surfaces, we observe for alkali halide and metal oxide substrates that the high-vacuum electrospray
  • materials, ranging from metal surfaces [5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13], over metal oxides [14] and insulating substrates [15] to graphene monolayers on metals [16]. In HV-ESD-based devices, a solution containing the molecules reaches an emitter located in front of the entrance capillary, as shown in Figure
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Published 15 Jun 2021

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering of water in aqueous dispersions of silver nanoparticles

  • Paulina Filipczak,
  • Krzysztof Hałagan,
  • Jacek Ulański and
  • Marcin Kozanecki

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 497–506, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.40

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  • metal surfaces, which is very different in comparison to bulk water [24]. It was explained that the ordering of water molecules near to AgNPs is due to the electrostatic interactions between water and AgNPs. Some simulation studies also reported the enhancement of hydrogen bonds in the water structure
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Published 25 May 2021

Interface interaction of transition metal phthalocyanines with strontium titanate (100)

  • Reimer Karstens,
  • Thomas Chassé and
  • Heiko Peisert

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 485–496, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.39

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  • . It seems that, generally, such oxidic surfaces are more prone to support the cleavage of intramolecular C–F bonds in comparison to metal surfaces. Bulk crystal structures (side views) of: (a) TiO2-terminated strontium titanate (100) and (b) SrO-terminated strontium titanate (100) (Ti4+: light blue
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Published 21 May 2021

Reconstruction of a 2D layer of KBr on Ir(111) and electromechanical alteration by graphene

  • Zhao Liu,
  • Antoine Hinaut,
  • Stefan Peeters,
  • Sebastian Scherb,
  • Ernst Meyer,
  • Maria Clelia Righi and
  • Thilo Glatzel

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 432–439, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.35

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  • , resulting in quasi free-standing graphene layers [18]. Alkali halide layers are frequently used as decoupling layers in surface science [19][20][21][22]. They are reported to form single- or double-layer islands with a typical cubic structure on single-crystalline transition metal surfaces [23][24
  • contrast, on hexagonal (111) oriented metal surfaces, alkali halides were reported to arrange in cubic islands [31][32][33]. Sometimes, they exhibit a moiré pattern, for example, as a result of the incommensurate growth in the system of NaCl/Cu(111) [34]. Furthermore, considering the interface of alkali
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Published 11 May 2021

Extended iron phthalocyanine islands self-assembled on a Ge(001):H surface

  • Rafal Zuzak,
  • Marek Szymonski and
  • Szymon Godlewski

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2021, 12, 232–241, doi:10.3762/bjnano.12.19

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  • transistors [24][41][42]. Moreover, they are ideal candidates to study the influence of the interaction between the central metal atom and the surrounding ligands on the overall properties. Commonly, metal phthalocyanines and their derivatives have been investigated on crystalline metal surfaces [43][44][45
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Published 05 Mar 2021

The influence of an interfacial hBN layer on the fluorescence of an organic molecule

  • Christine Brülke,
  • Oliver Bauer and
  • Moritz M. Sokolowski

Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2020, 11, 1663–1684, doi:10.3762/bjnano.11.149

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  • ) and the metal surfaces Cu(111) and Ag(111) can be linked to the different bonding of PTCDA to the surfaces. In UPS experiments [33], a chemisorptive interaction of the metal surfaces with the PTCDA molecule was found, leading to a (partial) filling of the former LUMO on Ag(111) and Cu(111). On PTCDA
  • primarily observed on rough/nanostructured rather than on flat metal surfaces [45], the SERS effect is expected to be larger for molecules located in proximity to surface defects. Thus, at surface positions with a higher defect density, the Raman intensities are expected to be higher. The relevance of the
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Published 03 Nov 2020
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