Model for the shapes of islands and pits on (111) surfaces of fcc metals
- 15 September 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 50 (11) , 7946-7951
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.50.7946
Abstract
It is experimentally observed that adsorbate atoms and vacancies on (111) surfaces of fcc metals cluster into islands which are approximately hexagonal, but which on closer inspection turn out to have equilibrium facets that alternate in length ABABAB around the six sides of the island. By contrast, previous theoretical models for island faceting predict a rotating sequence of three lengths ABCABC around the island. We propose a model for the observed shapes, whose physical basis is the variation of the local arrangements of substrate atoms seen by an adsorbate atom. We map our model onto a generalized form of the two-dimensional Ising model having three- as well as two-spin interactions, and estimate using atom-embedding calculations the strengths of these interactions for Cu adsorbed on a Cu(111) surface. We then describe a highly efficient Monte Carlo technique for calculating the equilibrium crystal shapes of general Ising-type models in two or three dimensions, and apply it to the model in hand. Our results do indeed show alternating facet lengths very similar to those seen in experiments.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Morphological effects induced by the formation of a Pt-adatom lattice gas on Pt(111)Surface Science, 1992
- The homoepitaxial growth of Pt on Pt(111) studied with STMSurface Science, 1992
- Temperature dependence of the sputtering morphology of Pt(111)Surface Science, 1991
- Self-diffusion on copper surfacesPhysical Review B, 1991
- Observation of sputtering damage on Au(111)Surface Science, 1990
- Microscopic Observation of Step and Terrace Diffusion of Indium Atoms on Cu(111) SurfacesEurophysics Letters, 1988
- Exact equilibrium shapes of Ising crystals on triangular/honeycomb latticesJournal of Statistical Physics, 1986
- A simple empirical N-body potential for transition metalsPhilosophical Magazine A, 1984
- Embedded-atom method: Derivation and application to impurities, surfaces, and other defects in metalsPhysical Review B, 1984
- Semiempirical, Quantum Mechanical Calculation of Hydrogen Embrittlement in MetalsPhysical Review Letters, 1983