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Growth and Surface Structure of Zinc Oxide Layers on a Pd(111) Surface
188
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
Surface StructureEngineeringNanosheetZinc Oxide LayersSolid-state ChemistryChemistryIi-vi SemiconductorQuantum MaterialsCompressed OverlayerOxygen PressureMaterials ScienceOxide HeterostructuresWell-ordered Zinc OxideOxide ElectronicsLayered MaterialSurface CharacterizationSurface ChemistrySurface AnalysisSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsSurface EngineeringSurface Reactivity
The growth and geometric structure of ultrathin zinc oxide films on Pd(111) has been studied by scanning tunneling microscopy, low-energy electron diffraction, and density functional theory calculations. For sub-monolayer coverages, depending on the oxygen pressure, two well-ordered zinc oxide phases with (4 × 4) and (6 × 6) coincidence structures form, which are attributed to H-terminated Zn6O5 and graphite-like Zn6O6 layers, respectively. The (6 × 6) phase exhibits a pronounced oxygen pressure dependence: at low p(O2) a well-ordered (6 × 6) two-dimensional array of O vacancies develops, yielding a layer with a formal Zn25O24 stoichiometry, while at high p(O2) the Zn6O6 monolayer transforms into bilayer islands. For oxide coverages up to 4 monolayers the graphite-like Zn6O6 structure is thermodynamically the most stable phase over a large range of oxygen chemical potentials, before it converges to the bulk-type wurtzite structure. Under oxygen-poor conditions a compressed overlayer of Zn adatoms can be stabilized on top of the Zn6O6 structure.
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