Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9594877 | Surface Science | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Adsorption of alkali atoms on the (1Â 1Â 1) and (1Â 0Â 0) noble metal surfaces has been shown recently to induce long-lived resonances located inside the surface projected band gap. However, the width of these resonances, as it appears in two-photon photo-emission experiments, is much larger than the inverse of their lifetime. We report on a theoretical study of some broadening mechanisms of these resonance lines in the Na/Cu(1Â 1Â 1) and Cs/Cu(1Â 1Â 1) systems at low coverage, including the homogeneous natural line broadening and the inhomogeneous statistical broadenings due to the distribution of adsorption heights associated to the quantal vibration of the alkali adsorbate and to the lateral disorder of alkali adsorption on the surface. The inhomogeneous mechanisms are shown to induce a very large broadening of the resonance line, in quantitative agreement with experimental results. The most important broadening effect appears to be the effect of the distribution of alkali adsorption heights.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
A.K. Kazansky, A.G. Borisov, J.P. Gauyacq,