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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 131(11): 116202, 2023 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37774294

RESUMO

Thermal gradients in nanomaterials can cause surface mass transport phenomena. However, the atomic fluxes are challenging to quantify and the underlying atomic mechanisms are complex. Using low energy electron microscopy we have examined in operando, under a thermal gradient of 10^{4} K/m, the thermomigration of supercooled Si(111)-1×1 advacancy islands. The islands move in the direction of the thermal gradient at 0.26±0.06 nm/s. This reveals that the adatoms move toward the cold region and the effective force exerted on Si adatoms is 1.4±0.4×10^{-8} eV/nm. We quantify the heat of transport of Si atoms Q^{*}=1.2±0.4 eV and show that it corresponds to the combined effects of adatom creation at step edges and adatom diffusion on atomically flat terraces.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 123(17): 176101, 2019 Oct 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31702228

RESUMO

The deposition of Au on Ge(111)-sqrt[3]×sqrt[3]-Au above the eutectic temperature results in the formation of AuGe liquid droplets that reach the liquidus composition by digging a hole in the Ge substrate. The combination of low-energy electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy measurements shows that AuGe droplets randomly migrate or electromigrate under an applied electric current dragging their underneath hole. The droplet motion is due to a mass transport phenomenon based on Ge dissolution at the droplet front and Ge crystallization at its rear. At high temperature the mass transport is limited by attachment or detachment at the solid-liquid interface and the activation energy is 1.05±0.3 eV. At low temperature the effective activation energy increases as a function of the droplet radius. This behavior is attributed to the nucleation of 2D layers at the faceted liquid-solid interface.

3.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 10642, 2017 09 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28878360

RESUMO

Fundamental interest for 2D electron gas (2DEG) systems has been recently renewed with the advent of 2D materials and their potential high-impact applications in optoelectronics. Here, we investigate a 2DEG created by the electron transfer from a Ag adatom gas deposited on a Si(111) [Formula: see text]-Ag surface to an electronic surface state. Using low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM), we measure the Ag adatom gas concentration and the 2DEG-induced charge transfer. We demonstrate a linear dependence of the surface work function change on the Ag adatom gas concentration. A breakdown of the linear relationship is induced by the occurrence of the Ag adatom gas superstructure identified as Si(111) [Formula: see text]-Ag only observed below room temperature. We evidence below room temperature a confinement of the 2DEG on atomic terraces characterised by spatial inhomogeneities of the 2DEG-induced charge transfer along with temporal fluctuations. These variations mirror the Ag adatom gas concentration changes induced by the growth of 3D Ag islands and the occurrence of an Ehrlich-Schwoebel diffusion barrier of 155 ± 10 meV.

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