Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5426658 | Surface Science | 2006 | 10 Pages |
A simple solid-on-solid model, proposed earlier to describe overlayer-induced faceting of bcc(1Â 1Â 1) surface, is applied to faceting of curved surfaces covered by an adsorbate monolayer. Surfaces studied in this paper are formed by a part of sphere around the [1Â 1Â 1] pole. Results of Monte Carlo simulations show that the morphology of a faceted surface depends on the annealing temperature. At an initial stage the surface around the [1Â 1Â 1] pole consists of 3-sided pyramids and step-like facets, then step-like facets dominate and their number decreases with temperature, finally a single big pyramid is formed. It is shown that there is a reversible phase transition at which a faceted surface transforms to an almost spherical one. It is found that the temperature of this phase transition is an increasing function of the surface curvature. Simulation results show that measurements of high temperature properties performed directly and after fast cooling down to a low temperature lead to different results.