Covalent Group IV Atomic Clusters
- 20 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 235 (4791) , 860-865
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.235.4791.860
Abstract
Atomic clusters containing from two to several hundred atoms offer the possibility of studying the transition from molecules to crystalline solids. The covalent group IV elements carbon, silicon, and germanium are now being examined with this long-range objective. These elements are particularly interesting because of the very different character of their crystalline solids and because they are intermediate between metals and insulators in the nature of their bonding. Small mass-selected atom cluster ions are formed by pulsed laser techniques and identified by time-of-flight methods. Laser photoexcitation is used to study the relative stability of these clusters and their modes of fragmentation. These modes for C n + clusters, which tend to fragment with a characteristic loss of a neutral C 3 , are found to be different from the modes for Si n + and Ge n + clusters, which tend to fragment to "magic" clusters such as Si 4 + , Si 6 + and Si 10 + . These experimental results can be accounted for by recent theoretical calculations of the ground-state structure and stability of small silicon and carbon clusters. Several theoretical approaches give consistent results, showing that small silicon clusters are compact and different from small fragments of the bulk crystal. Calculations show that carbon clusters change from linear structures toward cyclic structures as the cluster size increases, but with significant odd-even differences.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Supersonic cluster beams of III–V semiconductors: GaxAsyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1986
- Silicon and germanium clusters. A theoretical study of their electronic structures and propertiesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1986
- Photofragmentation of mass-resolved carbon cluster ions: Observation of a ‘‘magic’’ neutral fragmentThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1986
- Semiconductor cluster beams: One and two color ionization studies of Six and GexThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Stability, kinetics, and magic numbers of Si+n (n=7–45) clustersThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Theoretical study of small silicon clusters: Cyclic ground state structure of Si3The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Supersonic metal cluster beams of refractory metals: Spectral investigations of ultracold Mo2The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1983
- Self-Consistent Equations Including Exchange and Correlation EffectsPhysical Review B, 1965
- Inhomogeneous Electron GasPhysical Review B, 1964
- Large Molecules in Carbon VaporJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1959