We present an extensive study of structure, composition, electronic and
magnetic properties of Ce--Pt surface intermetallic phases on Pt(111) as a
function of their thickness. The sequence of structural phases appearing in low
energy electron diffraction (LEED) may invariably be attributed to a single
underlying intermetallic atomic lattice. Findings from both microscopic and
spectroscopic methods, respectively, prove compatible with CePt5 formation
when their characteristic probing depth is adequately taken into account. The
intermetallic film thickness serves as an effective tuning parameter which
brings about characteristic variations of the Cerium valence and related
properties. Soft x-ray absorption (XAS) and magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD)
prove well suited to trace the changing Ce valence and to assess relevant
aspects of Kondo physics in the CePt5 surface intermetallic. We find
characteristic Kondo scales of the order of 102 K and evidence for
considerable magnetic Kondo screening of the local Ce 4f moments.
CePt5/Pt(111) and related systems therefore appear to be promising
candidates for further studies of low-dimensional Kondo lattices at surfaces.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure