Giant alkali-metal-induced lattice relaxation as the driving force of the insulating phase of alkali-metal/Si(111):B

Ab initio density-functional theory calculations, photoemission spectroscopy (PES), scanning tunneling microscopy, and spectroscopy (STM, STS) have been used to solve the 2sqrt[3]×2sqrt[3]R30 surface reconstruction observed previously by LEED on 0.5 ML K/Si:B. A large K-induced vertical lattice rela...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2011-10, Vol.107 (18), p.187603-187603, Article 187603
Hauptverfasser: Chaput, L, Tournier-Colletta, C, Cardenas, L, Tejeda, A, Kierren, B, Malterre, D, Fagot-Revurat, Y, Le Fèvre, P, Bertran, F, Taleb-Ibrahimi, A, Trabada, D G, Ortega, J, Flores, F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ab initio density-functional theory calculations, photoemission spectroscopy (PES), scanning tunneling microscopy, and spectroscopy (STM, STS) have been used to solve the 2sqrt[3]×2sqrt[3]R30 surface reconstruction observed previously by LEED on 0.5 ML K/Si:B. A large K-induced vertical lattice relaxation occurring only for 3/4 of Si adatoms is shown to quantitatively explain both the chemical shift of 1.14 eV and the ratio 1/3 measured on the two distinct B 1s core levels. A gap is observed between valence and conduction surface bands by ARPES and STS which is shown to have mainly a Si-B character. Finally, the calculated STM images agree with our experimental results. This work solves the controversy about the origin of the insulating ground state of alkali-metal/Si(111):B semiconducting interfaces which were believed previously to be related to many-body effects.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/physrevlett.107.187603