Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9595593 | Surface Science | 2005 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
The high solubility and diffusivity of oxygen in Nb, Ta and V are responsible for the difficulty in the preparation of a clean, well-ordered (1Â 0Â 0) surfaces of these early transition metals. The deposition and subsequent annealing of a metal overlayer on Nb(1Â 0Â 0) are a convenient route for the preparation of flat surfaces with the Nb lattice constant and a metallic character. Such well-ordered, stable, inert and easily reproducible Nb(1Â 0Â 0)-like surfaces can be produced due to the suppression of oxygen surface segregation by a suitable layer blocking sub-surface oxygen diffusion. For example, a Nb(1Â 0Â 0)-like surface can be obtained by annealing thin Au or Pd films deposited on Nb(1Â 0Â 0), since this results in a Au-Nb or Pd-Nb alloy situated just below the surface which preserves the structure of the Nb-lattice and effectively suppresses the oxygen segregation toward the surface. In contrast, Ag and Cu layers do not show this property as these metals do not form a bulk alloy with Nb. The presence or absence of bulk alloying and its relation to surface oxygen contamination is a general phenomena observed for many metallic layers deposited on V, Nb and Ta substrates. A discussion of results reported in the literature is given for these adsorbate systems.
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Authors
E. Hüger, H. Wormeester, K. Osuch,