Nano-Beaker Offers Insight Into the Condensation of Atoms

Monitoring of the condensation of xenon: Depicted in scanning tunneling microscopy are three different quantum wells that contain one, two and three xenon atoms.

The team headed by Professor Thomas Jung, which consists of researchers from the Swiss Nanoscience Institute, Department of Physics at the University of Basel and the Paul Scherrer Institute, developed a method enabling the condensation of individual atoms to be mapped on a step by step basis for the first time. The researchers allowed atoms of the noble gas xenon to condensate in quantum wells and monitored the resulting accumulations using a scanning tunneling microscope.

Quantum wells as beakers

The autonomous organization of specifically 'programmed' molecules facilitates the creation of a porous network on a substrate surface – these are the quantum wells used as measuring beakers with a specifically defined size, shape and atomic wall and floor structure. The atoms' freedom of movement is restricted in the quantum wells, allowing the arrangement of the atoms to be closely monitored and mapped depending on the composition.

With this data, the researchers were able to show that the xenon atoms always arrange themselves according to a certain principle. For example, some units consisting of four atoms are only formed when there are at least seven atoms in the quantum well. And if there are twelve atoms in the quantum well, this results in the creation of three highly stable four-atom units.

Conclusions about the nature of bonding

The images and structures of nano-condensates recorded for the first time allow key conclusions to be drawn as to the nature of the physical bonds formed by the xenon atoms. “But this system is not restricted exclusively to noble gases,” says Sylwia Nowakowska, lead author of the publication. “We can also use it to research other atoms and the way that they bond.” As the newly developed method accurately maps atomic bonding and determines the stability of the various states, it can also be used to verify theoretical calculations about bonds.

The results of the study are based on a collaboration between researchers from Switzerland, Brazil, Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands, and were published in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature Communications.

Further information
Prof. Thomas Jung, Swiss Nanoscience Institute (SNI), University of Basel, cell:+41 79 222 45 36 , email : thomas.jung@psi.ch

Media Contact

Olivia Poisson Universität Basel

More Information:

http://www.unibas.ch

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