Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5420066 Progress in Surface Science 2009 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
As a structurally rather flexible surface Ir(1 0 0) can be prepared with different structural phases. The clean and stable phase, Ir(1 0 0)-(5 × 1)-hex, exhibits a quasi-hexagonal top layer arranged in 5-fold periodicity on the square substrate. Also, a hydrogen stabilized phase, Ir(1 0 0)-(5 × 1)-H, with Ir wires of single atomic width and again 5-fold periodicity residing on (1 0 0) layers below can be prepared as well as a bulk-like terminated but metastable phase, Ir(1 0 0)-(1 × 1). The (5 × 1) reconstructed phases offer linear adsorption channels of nanosized width, so that by deposition of other metals linear nanostructures can be formed by self-organisation in a bottom-up process. This is demonstrated for the deposition of the transition metals Fe, Co and Ni which, on the flat (1 0 0) surface, would be under considerable tensile strain of the order of 8-9%. We show that the accompanying stress leads to the formation of stair-rod dislocations by which the stress is relaxed. Calculations using density functional theory (DFT) reveal for the (1×1) phase as substrate that these dislocations appear at a coverage of about 3-4 monolayers and are either pinned by surface defects or by further adatoms which decorate them. On the (5 × 1)-H phase this pinning appears with long-range order. So, by the Ir wires at the interface the developing nanostructures including the dislocations can be structurally accessed by experiment, here with crystallographic precision by quantitative low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). Moreover, scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) reveals both the morphology of the nanostructured films and their buckling with atomic resolution.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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