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Classification of hexagonal adlayer arrangements by means of collective geometrical properties
Author(s) -
Alexandre Tkatchenko,
Nikola Batina
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
the journal of chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 357
eISSN - 1089-7690
pISSN - 0021-9606
DOI - 10.1063/1.2360530
Subject(s) - scanning tunneling microscope , hexagonal crystal system , atomic radius , substrate (aquarium) , radius , characterization (materials science) , surface finish , adsorption , chemical physics , materials science , surface (topology) , crystallography , molecular physics , chemistry , nanotechnology , geometry , mathematics , oceanography , computer security , organic chemistry , geology , computer science , composite material
Unequal-sphere packing model is applied for the simulation of large number of hexagonal adlayer structures with surface coverage between theta=13 and theta=1 on the hexagonal substrate, with atomic radius of the adsorbate and substrate atoms as the only input. Each structure is characterized with respect to collective adlayer properties: the average adlayer height and the adlayer roughness. The distribution of hexagonal arrangements is presented in a special plot, which can be used for identification and characterization of hexagonal adlayers of different surface coverages and atomic registries. The most likely structures are related to the extreme values of our model parameters. The usefulness of this methodology is successfully demonstrated by comparison with some real adsorbate-substrate systems, i.e., halogens and rare gases adsorbed on (111) surface. Besides the agreement with experimental results, our model offers new insight into the formation of atomic adlayers and detailed analysis of the atomic registry. We believe that our approach will be of use for identification of probable structures among the large number of combinatorial possibilities in theoretical studies and for better interpretation of experimental results (i.e., scanning-tunneling microscopy images of atomic adlayers).

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