Structure and Electronic Properties of Interface-Confined Oxide Nanostructures
Author(s) -
Yun Liu,
Yanxiao Ning,
Liang Yu,
Zhiwen Zhou,
Qingfei Liu,
Yi Zhang,
Hao Chen,
Jianping Xiao,
Ping Liu,
Fan Yang,
Xinhe Bao
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.7b06164
Subject(s) - nanostructure , materials science , nucleation , electronic structure , nanotechnology , chemical physics , oxide , substrate (aquarium) , fabrication , nanoscopic scale , computational chemistry , chemistry , oceanography , alternative medicine , organic chemistry , medicine , pathology , geology , metallurgy
The controlled fabrication of nanostructures has often used a substrate template to mediate and control the growth kinetics. Electronic substrate-mediated interactions have been demonstrated to guide the assembly of organic molecules or the nucleation of metal atoms but usually at cryogenic temperatures, where the diffusion has been limited. Combining STM, STS, and DFT studies, we report that the strong electronic interaction between transition metals and oxides could indeed govern the growth of low-dimensional oxide nanostructures. As a demonstration, a series of FeO triangles, which are of the same structure and electronic properties but with different sizes (side length >3 nm), are synthesized on Pt(111). The strong interfacial interaction confines the growth of FeO nanostructures, leading to a discrete size distribution and a uniform step structure. Given the same interfacial configuration, as-grown FeO nanostructures not only expose identical edge/surface structure but also exhibit the same electronic properties, as manifested by the local density of states and local work functions. We expect the interfacial confinement effect can be generally applied to control the growth of oxide nanostructures on transition metal surfaces. These oxide nanostructures of the same structure and electronic properties are excellent models for studies of nanoscale effects and applications.
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