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Author

W. Falkenstein

Bio: W. Falkenstein is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 864 citations.

Papers
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01 Jan 1976
TL;DR: Spin coating is demonstrated to be a promising technique for depositing magnetic transition metal complexes as discussed by the authors, which shows nano-crystalline formations with random orientations, indicating the preservation of the molecular structure upon the deposition process.
Abstract: Spin coating is demonstrated to be a promising technique for depositing magnetic transition metal complexes. The thin films show nano-crystalline formations with random orientations. The optical properties determined using spectroscopic ellipsometry compare well to those of single molecules in solution indicating the preservation of the molecular structure upon the deposition process. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

879 citations


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TL;DR: In this paper, a method to disperse and exfoliate graphite to give graphene suspended in water-surfactant solutions was demonstrated. Optical characterisation of these suspensions allowed the partial optimisation of the dispersion process and showed the dispersed phase to consist of small graphitic flakes.
Abstract: We have demonstrated a method to disperse and exfoliate graphite to give graphene suspended in water-surfactant solutions. Optical characterisation of these suspensions allowed the partial optimisation of the dispersion process. Transmission electron microscopy showed the dispersed phase to consist of small graphitic flakes. More than 40% of these flakes had <5 layers with ~3% of flakes consisting of monolayers. These flakes are stabilised against reaggregation by Coulomb repulsion due to the adsorbed surfactant. However, the larger flakes tend to sediment out over ~6 weeks, leaving only small flakes dispersed. It is possible to form thin films by vacuum filtration of these dispersions. Raman and IR spectroscopic analysis of these films suggests the flakes to be largely free of defects and oxides. The deposited films are reasonably conductive and are semi-transparent. Further improvements may result in the development of cheap transparent conductors.

1,803 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This perspective reviews some recent progress and ongoing challenges in density functional theory.
Abstract: Density functional theory (DFT) is an incredible success story. The low computational cost, combined with useful (but not yet chemical) accuracy, has made DFT a standard technique in most branches of chemistry and materials science. Electronic structure problems in a dazzling variety of fields are currently being tackled. However, DFT has many limitations in its present form: too many approximations, failures for strongly correlated systems, too slow for liquids, etc. This perspective reviews some recent progress and ongoing challenges.

1,303 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Aug 2007-Science
TL;DR: A highly specific and sensitive optical sensor based on an ultrahigh quality (Q) factor (Q > 108) whispering-gallery microcavity is reported and label-free, single-molecule detection of interleukin-2 was demonstrated in serum.
Abstract: Current single-molecule detection techniques require labeling the target molecule. We report a highly specific and sensitive optical sensor based on an ultrahigh quality (Q) factor (Q > 10^8) whispering-gallery microcavity. The silica surface is functionalized to bind the target molecule; binding is detected by a resonant wavelength shift. Single-molecule detection is confirmed by observation of single-molecule binding events that shift the resonant frequency, as well as by the statistics for these shifts over many binding events. These shifts result from a thermo-optic mechanism. Additionally, label-free, single-molecule detection of interleukin-2 was demonstrated in serum. These experiments demonstrate a dynamic range of 10^(12) in concentration, establishing the microcavity as a sensitive and versatile detector.

1,189 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a simple catalytic chemical vapor deposition technique was used to synthesize high-purity single-walled carbon nanotubes at low temperature using alcohol as the carbon source.

986 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a shifted zeroth-order Hamiltonian is presented, which will be used in second-order multiconfigurational perturbation theory (CASPT2).

860 citations