Surface determination through atomically resolved secondary-electron imaging

Unique determination of the atomic structure of technologically relevant surfaces is often limited by both a need for homogeneous crystals and ambiguity of registration between the surface and bulk. Atomically resolved secondary-electron imaging is extremely sensitive to this registration and is com...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2015-06, Vol.6 (1), p.7358-7358, Article 7358
Hauptverfasser: Ciston, J., Brown, H. G., D’Alfonso, A. J., Koirala, P., Ophus, C., Lin, Y., Suzuki, Y., Inada, H., Zhu, Y., Allen, L. J., Marks, L. D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Unique determination of the atomic structure of technologically relevant surfaces is often limited by both a need for homogeneous crystals and ambiguity of registration between the surface and bulk. Atomically resolved secondary-electron imaging is extremely sensitive to this registration and is compatible with faceted nanomaterials, but has not been previously utilized for surface structure determination. Here we report a detailed experimental atomic-resolution secondary-electron microscopy analysis of the c(6 × 2) reconstruction on strontium titanate (001) coupled with careful simulation of secondary-electron images, density functional theory calculations and surface monolayer-sensitive aberration-corrected plan-view high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. Our work reveals several unexpected findings, including an amended registry of the surface on the bulk and strontium atoms with unusual seven-fold coordination within a typically high surface coverage of square pyramidal TiO 5 units. Dielectric screening is found to play a critical role in attenuating secondary-electron generation processes from valence orbitals. Technical difficulties have so far limited the application of high-resolution secondary-electron microscopy in imaging surface structures. Here, the authors report a successful determination of surface reconstruction of strontium titanate, using the secondary-electron microscopy along with other techniques.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms8358