Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5425793 | Surface Science | 2007 | 7 Pages |
The formation of (1Â 1Â 1)-oriented Cu-clusters on ZnO(0Â 0Â 0Â 1)-Zn at room temperature is followed by in situ applied scanning tunneling microscopy. Kink-sites at step edges and especially the apexes of triangular ZnO-substrate terraces act as preferred nucleation sites. At room temperature the decay of small Cu-islands takes place on a time scale of minutes. Larger Cu-coverages lead to an ensemble of interconnected 3D-islands of uniform height separated by trenches down to the substrate. A disordered dislocation network is visible on top of the Cu-islands. Annealing leads to a piling up of the Cu-islands. An initially undisturbed ZnO-substrate in between the islands shows that there is no strong reaction between the Cu-clusters and the oxide at room temperature. A strong decrease of the adlayer coverage visible above the ZnO-substrate layer for annealing temperature above 570Â K points to a partial entrenching of the islands into the oxide support and an alloy formation.