TY - JOUR
T1 - Ge(011)-c(8×10) surface structure and hydrogen desorption pathways
T2 - A temperature-programmed desorption and scanning tunneling microscopy study
AU - Kim, H.
AU - Vailionis, A.
AU - Cahill, D. G.
AU - Greene, J. E.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the financial support of the Semiconductor Research Corporation and the Materials Science Division of the US Department of Energy under contract number DEAC0276ER01198.
PY - 2000/6/10
Y1 - 2000/6/10
N2 - Temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) were used to probe the atomic arrangement on clean Ge(011)-c(8×10), as well as the desorption kinetics and pathways from hydrogen-adsorbed surfaces. For the TPD measurements, the samples were heated at 2 °C s-1 after adsorbing atomic deuterium at 100 °C to coverages θD ranging up to saturation. Low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) and STM show that saturation deuterium coverage results in a (1×1) structure with the surface composed of randomly distributed adatom islands. TPD spectra exhibit three second-order peaks corresponding to D2 desorption from multideuterides, adatom monodeuterides and rest-atom monodeuterides. Desorption from the multideuteride phase (with an activation energy Ea of 1.61 eV) begins at 200 °C and, by 270 °C, only the D-adatom and D-rest-atom monodeuteride phases remain. D2 begins to desorb from adatom sites (Ea = 1.76 eV) above 230 °C and from rest-atom sites (Ea = 1.83 eV) above 240 °C. From quantitative analyses of the TPD spectra, the adatom density on the clean surface is ≥0.47. This high adatom density - similar to that of Si(111)-(7×7), Si(011)-(16×2) and Ge(111)-c(2×8), all of which contain adatoms and rest atoms as primary building blocks - appears to rule out previously proposed models for the Ge(011)-c(8×10) surface structure, for which the adatom density is 0.064.
AB - Temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) were used to probe the atomic arrangement on clean Ge(011)-c(8×10), as well as the desorption kinetics and pathways from hydrogen-adsorbed surfaces. For the TPD measurements, the samples were heated at 2 °C s-1 after adsorbing atomic deuterium at 100 °C to coverages θD ranging up to saturation. Low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) and STM show that saturation deuterium coverage results in a (1×1) structure with the surface composed of randomly distributed adatom islands. TPD spectra exhibit three second-order peaks corresponding to D2 desorption from multideuterides, adatom monodeuterides and rest-atom monodeuterides. Desorption from the multideuteride phase (with an activation energy Ea of 1.61 eV) begins at 200 °C and, by 270 °C, only the D-adatom and D-rest-atom monodeuteride phases remain. D2 begins to desorb from adatom sites (Ea = 1.76 eV) above 230 °C and from rest-atom sites (Ea = 1.83 eV) above 240 °C. From quantitative analyses of the TPD spectra, the adatom density on the clean surface is ≥0.47. This high adatom density - similar to that of Si(111)-(7×7), Si(011)-(16×2) and Ge(111)-c(2×8), all of which contain adatoms and rest atoms as primary building blocks - appears to rule out previously proposed models for the Ge(011)-c(8×10) surface structure, for which the adatom density is 0.064.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0039-6028(00)00386-1
DO - 10.1016/S0039-6028(00)00386-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0034631002
SN - 0039-6028
VL - 457
SP - 337
EP - 344
JO - Surface Science
JF - Surface Science
IS - 3
ER -