ABSTRACT
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.226101.
ABSTRACT
A chemically stable bilayers of SiO_{2} (2D silica) is a new, wide band gap 2D material. Up till now graphene has been the only 2D material where the bending rigidity has been measured. Here we present inelastic helium atom scattering data from 2D silica on Ru(0001) and extract the first bending rigidity, κ, measurements for a nonmonoatomic 2D material of definable thickness. We find a value of κ=8.8 eV±0.5 eV which is of the same order of magnitude as theoretical values in the literature for freestanding crystalline 2D silica.
ABSTRACT
The structure and properties of ternary oxide materials at the nanoscale are poorly explored both on experimental and theoretical levels. With this work we demonstrate the successful on-surface synthesis of two-dimensional (2D) ternary oxide, MnWO x and FeWO x , nanolayers on a Pd(1 0 0) surface and the understanding of their new structure and phase behaviour with the help of state-of-art surface structure and spectroscopy techniques. We find that the 2D MnWO x and FeWO x phases, prepared under identical thermodynamic conditions, exhibit similar structural properties, reflecting the similarity of the bulk MnWO4 and FeWO4 phases with the wolframite structure. Structure models of prototypical 2D ternary oxide phases are proposed and discussed in the light of new structure architecture concepts which have no analogues in the bulk.
ABSTRACT
The exceptional physical properties of graphene have sparked tremendous interests toward two-dimensional (2D) materials with honeycomb structure. We report here the successful fabrication of 2D iron tungstate (FeWO x ) layers with honeycomb geometry on a Pt(111) surface, using the solid-state reaction of (WO3)3 clusters with a FeO(111) monolayer on Pt(111). The formation process and the atomic structure of two commensurate FeWO x phases, with (2 × 2) and (6 × 6) periodicities, have been characterized experimentally by combination of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and understood theoretically by density functional theory (DFT) modeling. The thermodynamically most stable (2 × 2) phase has a formal FeWO3 stoichiometry and corresponds to a buckled Fe2+/W4+ layer arranged in a honeycomb lattice, terminated by oxygen atoms in Fe-W bridging positions. This 2D FeWO3 layer has a novel structure and stoichiometry and has no analogues to known bulk iron tungstate phases. It is theoretically predicted to exhibit a ferromagnetic electronic ground state with a Curie temperature of 95 K, as opposed to the antiferromagnetic behavior of bulk FeWO4 materials.