Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5424272 | Surface Science | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The interface and electronic structure of thin (â¼20-74Â nm) Co3O4(1Â 1Â 0) epitaxial films grown by oxygen-assisted molecular beam epitaxy on MgAl2O4(1Â 1Â 0) single crystal substrates have been investigated by means of real and reciprocal space techniques. As-grown film surfaces are found to be relatively disordered and exhibit an oblique low energy electron diffraction (LEED) pattern associated with the O-rich CoO2 bulk termination of the (1Â 1Â 0) surface. Interface and bulk film structure are found to improve significantly with post-growth annealing at 820Â K in air and display sharp rectangular LEED patterns, suggesting a surface stoichiometry of the alternative Co2O2 bulk termination of the (1Â 1Â 0) surface. Non-contact atomic force microscopy demonstrates the presence of wide terraces separated by atomic steps in the annealed films that are not present in the as-grown structures; the step height of â2.7Â Ã
corresponds to two atomic layers and confirms a single termination for the annealed films, consistent with the LEED results. A model of the (1Ã1) surfaces that allows for compensation of the polar surfaces is presented.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
C.A.F. Vaz, H.-Q. Wang, C.H. Ahn, V.E. Henrich, M.Z. Baykara, T.C. Schwendemann, N. Pilet, B.J. Albers, U.D. Schwarz, L.H. Zhang, Y. Zhu, J. Wang, E.I. Altman,