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Main Authors: Ciston, J., Subramanian, A., Marks, L. D.
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2008
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Acceso en liña:https://arxiv.org/abs/0809.2459
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author Ciston, J.
Subramanian, A.
Marks, L. D.
author_facet Ciston, J.
Subramanian, A.
Marks, L. D.
contents We report an experimental and theoretical analysis of the root(3)xroot(3)-R30 and 2x2 reconstructions on the MgO (111) surface combining transmission electron microscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and reasonably accurate density functional calculations using the meta-GGA functional TPSS. The experimental data clearly shows that the surfaces contain significant coverages of hydroxyl terminations, even after UHV annealing, and as such cannot be the structures which have been previously reported. For the 2x2 surfaces a relatively simple structural framework is detailed which fits all the experimental and theoretical data. For the root(3)xroot(3) there turn out to be two plausible structures and neither the experimental nor theoretical results can differentiate between the two within error. However, by examining the conditions under which the surface is formed we describe a kinetic route for the transformation between the different reconstructions that involves mobile hydroxyl groups and protons, and relatively immobile cations, which strongly suggests only one of the two root(3)xroot(3) structures.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_0809_2459
institution arXiv
publishDate 2008
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Hydroxylated MgO (111) reconstructions: why the case for clean surfaces does not hold water
Ciston, J.
Subramanian, A.
Marks, L. D.
Materials Science
We report an experimental and theoretical analysis of the root(3)xroot(3)-R30 and 2x2 reconstructions on the MgO (111) surface combining transmission electron microscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and reasonably accurate density functional calculations using the meta-GGA functional TPSS. The experimental data clearly shows that the surfaces contain significant coverages of hydroxyl terminations, even after UHV annealing, and as such cannot be the structures which have been previously reported. For the 2x2 surfaces a relatively simple structural framework is detailed which fits all the experimental and theoretical data. For the root(3)xroot(3) there turn out to be two plausible structures and neither the experimental nor theoretical results can differentiate between the two within error. However, by examining the conditions under which the surface is formed we describe a kinetic route for the transformation between the different reconstructions that involves mobile hydroxyl groups and protons, and relatively immobile cations, which strongly suggests only one of the two root(3)xroot(3) structures.
title Hydroxylated MgO (111) reconstructions: why the case for clean surfaces does not hold water
topic Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/0809.2459