52 research outputs found
A Model for the Thermal Expansion of Ag(111) and other Metal Surfaces
We develop a model to study the thermal expansion of surfaces, wherein phonon
frequencies are obtained from ab initio total energy calculations. Anharmonic
effects are treated exactly in the direction normal to the surface, and within
a quasiharmonic approximation in the plane of the surface. We apply this model
to the Ag(111) and Al(111) surfaces, and find that our calculations reproduce
the experimental observation of a large and anomalous increase in the surface
thermal expansion of Ag(111) at high temperatures [P. Statiris, H.C. Lu and T.
Gustafsson, Phys. Rev. Lett. 72, 3574 (1994)]. Surprisingly, we find that this
increase can be attributed to a rapid softening of the in-plane phonon
frequencies, rather than due to the anharmonicity of the out-of-plane surface
phonon modes. This provides evidence for a new mechanism for the enhancement of
surface anharmonicity. A comparison with Al(111) shows that the two surfaces
behave quite differently, with no evidence for such anomalous behavior on
Al(111).Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Z. Chem. Phy
Interplay between Bonding and Magnetism in the Adsorption of NO on Rh Clusters
We have studied the adsorption of NO on small Rh clusters, containing one to
five atoms, using density functional theory in both spin-polarized and
non-spin-polarized forms. We find that NO bonds more strongly to Rh clusters
than it does to Rh(100) or Rh(111); however, it also quenches the magnetism of
the clusters. This (local) effect results in reducing the magnitude of the
adsorption energy, and also washes out the clear size-dependent trend observed
in the non-magnetic case. Our results illustrate the competition present
between the tendencies to bond and to magnetize, in small clusters.Comment: Submitted to J. of Chem. Phy
Elastic and Chemical Contributions to the Stability of Magnetic Surface Alloys on Ru(0001)
We have used density functional theory to study the structural stability of
surface alloys. Our systems consist of a single pseudomorphic layer of
on the Ru(0001) surface, where = Fe or Co, and = Pt, Au,
Ag, Cd, or Pb. Several of the combinations studied by us display a preference
for atomically mixed configurations over phase-segregated forms. We have also
performed further {\it ab initio} calculations to obtain the parameters
describing the elastic interactions between atoms in the alloy layer, including
the effective atomic sizes at the surface. We find that while elastic
interactions favor alloying for all the systems considered by us, in some cases
chemical interactions disfavor atomic mixing. We show that a simple criterion
(analogous to the Hume-Rothery first law for bulk alloys) need not necessarily
work for strain-stabilized surface alloys, because of the presence of
additional elastic contributions to the alloy heat of formation, that will tend
to oppose phase segregation.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures Submitted To Phys. Rev.
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