67 research outputs found
Atomic resolution scanning tunneling microscopy images of Au(111) surfaces in air and polar organic solvents
Atomic features of a closeâpacked metal surface have been observed for the first time by scanning tunneling microscopy in organic polar solvents. Evaporated gold films, exhibiting large reconstructed (111) terraces, have been imaged with a resolution far superior to previous results in aqueous environments
Diamond nucleation on cleaved Si(111)
Diamond crystallites have been nucleated and grown by hot filament chemical vapor deposition at 600Ă°C on the untreated fracture surface of a cleaved Si(111) sample. The flat surface of the cleaved crystal was inactive towards diamond nucleation while, on the terraced surface formed by the propagating crack, a high density of nuclei was found. The crystallites were nucleated in correspondence of edges between (111) terrace planes and step planes. The occurrence of edges, as determined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) observation, is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the nucleation and this fact suggests that particular atomic arrangements are required for the diamond nucleus formation
Modification of HF-treated silicon (100) surfaces by scanning tunneling microscopy in air under imaging conditions
The modification of HF-etched silicon (100) surface with a scanning tunneling microscope(STM) operated in air is studied for the first time in samples subjected to the standard HF etching without the follow-up rinsing in H2O. The modifications are produced in air under normal STM imaging conditions (V t =â1.4 V and I t =2 nA). The simultaneous acquisition of topographical, current image tunneling spectroscopy and local barrier-height images clearly shows that the nature of the modification is not only topographical but also chemical. The features produced with a resolution better than 25 nm are attributed to a tip-induced oxidation enhanced by the presence of fluorine on the surface
Using metallic noncontact atomic force microscope tips for imaging insulators and polar molecules: tip characterization and imaging mechanisms
We demonstrate that using metallic tips for noncontact atomic force microscopy (NC-AFM) imaging at relatively large (>0.5 nm) tip-surface separations provides a reliable method for studying molecules on insulating surfaces with chemical resolution and greatly reduces the complexity of interpreting experimental data. The experimental NC-AFM imaging and theoretical simulations were carried out for the NiO(001) surface as well as adsorbed CO and Co-Salen molecules using Cr-coated Si tips. The experimental results and density functional theory calculations confirm that metallic tips possess a permanent electric dipole moment with its positive end oriented toward the sample. By analyzing the experimental data, we could directly determine the dipole moment of the Cr-coated tip. A model representing the metallic tip as a point dipole is described and shown to produce NC-AFM images of individual CO molecules adsorbed onto NiO(001) in good quantitative agreement with experimental results. Finally, we discuss methods for characterizing the structure of metal-coated tips and the application of these tips to imaging dipoles of large adsorbed molecules. Ă© 2014 American Chemical Society
Surface magnetism in iron, cobalt, and nickel
We have calculated magnetic moments, work functions, and surface energies for several of the most closely packed surfaces of iron, cobalt, and nickel by means of a spin-polarized Greenâs-function technique based on the linear muffin-tin orbitals method within the tight-binding and atomic sphere approximations. We find enhanced spin moments at all the surfaces considered except for Ni fcc(111), where the moment at the surface reverts to its bulk value. This is in close agreement with earlier slab calculations. In addition, we find that the calculated work functions and surface energies agree with experimental values to within 10%, which may be considered most satisfactory in view of the computational efficiency of the Greenâs function technique. Exchange and correlation have been treated wihtin the local spin-density approximation and we have considered three different parametrizations of the original many-body data. We find that the calculated work functions depend as much on the choice of this parametrization as on the effect of spin polarization
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