Controlled lateral and perpendicular motion of atoms on metal surfaces
- 15 July 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 54 (3) , 2175-2183
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.54.2175
Abstract
We present the theoretical study of the controlled lateral and perpendicular motion of Xe on the Pt(111) surface. The lateral translation of Xe is manipulated by a tungsten tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. Using molecular statics and dynamics the energetics and different modes of atom translation are revealed. In the controlled and reversible transfer of Xe between two flat Pt(111) surfaces, effective charge on Xe, and the dipole moment of the Xe-Pt bond, are calculated as functions of the Xe-surface separation. The contributions of various mechanisms to the transfer rate of Xe are investigated by using the calculated quantum states of Xe under the applied bias voltage. These are tunneling and ballistic transfer, dipole excitation and excitation due to resonant tunneling of electrons, and electron wind force. We found that a single power law for the transfer rate does not exist in the whole range of applied pulse voltage. At high pulse voltage the transfer rate is dominated by the inelastic electron tunneling. At low pulse voltage the rate due to thermally assisted tunneling and ballistic transfer becomes important. © 1996 The American Physical Society.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lateral translation of an Xe atom on metal surfacesJournal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 1995
- Possibility of coherent multiple excitation in atom transfer with a scanning tunneling microscopePhysical Review B, 1994
- Role of multiple inelastic transitions in atom transfer with the scanning tunneling microscopePhysical Review B, 1993
- Inelastic resonance scattering, tunneling, and desorptionPhysical Review B, 1991
- Atomic emission from a gold scanning-tunneling-microscope tipPhysical Review Letters, 1990
- Atomic theory of scanning tunneling microscopyPhysical Review B, 1989
- Theory of the local tunneling spectrum of a vibrating adsorbateJournal of Vacuum Science & Technology A, 1988
- Silicon Satellite Spectra from Laser-Imploded MicroballoonsPhysical Review Letters, 1981
- Theory of Metal Surfaces: Induced Surface Charge and Image PotentialPhysical Review B, 1973
- Theory of Inelastic Electron-Molecule Interactions in Tunnel JunctionsPhysical Review Letters, 1967