Surface and Defect Properties of Solids
M W Roberts
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Add to basketSpecialist Periodical Reports provide systematic and detailed review coverage of progress in the major areas of chemical research. Written by experts in their specialist fields the series creates a unique service for the active research chemist, supplying regular critical in-depth accounts of progress in particular areas of chemistry. For over 90 years The Royal Society of Chemistry and its predecessor, the Chemical Society, have been publishing reports charting developments in chemistry, which originally took the form of Annual Reports. However, by 1967 the whole spectrum of chemistry could no longer be contained within one volume and the series Specialist Periodical Reports was born. The Annual Reports themselves still existed but were divided into two, and subsequently three, volumes covering Inorganic, Organic and Physical Chemistry. For more general coverage of the highlights in chemistry they remain a 'must'. Since that time the SPR series has altered according to the fluctuating degree of activity in various fields of chemistry. Some titles have remained unchanged, while others have altered their emphasis along with their titles; some have been combined under a new name whereas others have had to be discontinued. The current list of Specialist Periodical Reports can be seen on the inside flap of this volume.
Seller Inventory # LU-9780851862606
Reflecting the growing volume of published work in this field, researchers will find this book an invaluable source of information on current methods and applications.
Chapter 1 Recent Trends in the Application of Low-energy Electron Diffraction By R. W. Joyner and B. A. Somorjai,
Chapter 2 Some Developments in Field Ion Microscopy and its Applications By D.W. Bassett,
Chapter 3 Electron Spin Resonance Studies of Adsorbed Species By B. D. Flockhart,
Chapter 4 Reactions of Saturated Hydrocarbons with Hydrogen on Metals By J. C. Kempling and D. A. Whan,
Chapter 5 Infrared Studies of Species Adsorbed on Oxide Surfaces By C. H. Rochester and M . S. Scurrell,
Chapter 6 Orientational Order and Disorder in the Solid Isotopic Methanes By M. Bloom and J. A. Morrison,
Chapter 7 Point Defects in Ionic Crystals By J. Corish and P. W. M. Jacobs,
Chapter 8 The Role of Structural Defects in the Luminescence of Organic Molecular Crystals By J. O. Williams and J. M. Thomas,
Author Index, 269,
Recent Trends in the Application of Low-energy Electron Diffraction
BY R. W. JOYNER AND G. A. SOMORJAI
1 Introduction
In recent years surface science has become one of the fastest growing fields of the physical sciences. The application of low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) to determine surface structure, and to correlate it to other chemical, electronic, and transport properties of surfaces, is partly responsible for this remarkable development. The importance of surface phenomena in areas ranging from biology to solid state physics does not have to be elaborated. The interdisciplinary character of surface science, however, may be masked when viewed in the framework of a departmentalized academic or industrial structure. Surface science is in the early stages of development when compared with our understanding of the chemistry (structure and dynamics) of gas-phase molecules or with our knowledge of many fundamental properties of the solid state. The atomic structure and the chemical composition that were commonly available in these other fields and have served as the foundation for studies of all other physical chemical properties have been lacking in surface science. In the absence of this information many important surface phenomena have been awaiting interpretation.
Techniques of scattering of electrons from surfaces have provided the means to determine both the surface structure and the surface composition on an atomic scale. Low-energy electron diffraction permits us to develop surface crystallography that, similarly to X-ray diffraction, will be utilized to determine structure of surfaces and of adsorbed molecules of ever-increasing complexity. The analysis of the inelastically backscattered electrons yields, via the Auger spectrum, the chemical composition of the surface.
Electron scattering techniques for surface studies have overcome the difficulty of detecting a very small number of surface atoms (1013 — 1015 atoms cm-2) in the background of a very large concentration of bulk atoms (1022 cm-3). Since the chemical composition of the surface must be known to provide unique interpretation of surface structure, Auger electron spectroscopy which can be carried out in combination with low-energy electron diffraction has aided greatly the development of surface crystallography.
Low-energy electron diffraction plays a pre-eminent role in the determination of surface structure on an atomic scale. In addition, low-energy electron diffraction studies have been utilized to establish correlations between surface structure and many other surface phenomena, i.e. phase transformations, adsorption, condensation (epitaxy), and catalysis. It is the purpose of this Report to review the development of low-energy electron diffraction in the past few years and to indicate future trends of this important field of surface science.
2 The Theory of Surface Structure Analysis by Low-energy Electron Diffraction
The nature of low-energy electron scattering from surfaces is the question that must be answered in developing the theory to be used for the analysis of the diffracted electron beam intensities. Electron scattering by a single atom or by a periodic potential is interesting in its own right, and the interpretation of various properties of the scattered diffraction beams (their absolute intensities, shape of the scattered beam, surface resonance effects) are under intensive investigation. Nevertheless, the main thrust of theoretical work is to develop a simple but viable theory which permits computation of the relative intensities of the diffracted electron beams using a scattering model in which the only adjustable parameters are the positions of surface atoms. To some extent, the development of such a scattering theory that would enable one to perform surface crystallography is less demanding than the computation of various other beam properties. In the region of 30 — 120 eV, where most of the experimental data on the surface structures are detected, there are several diffraction beams and a great deal of experimental information is available. Just as in crystal structure analysis using X-ray beams, one needs to determine only the intensity ratios of the various diffracted electron beams, instead of the absolute intensities. Since the recent publication of a review on low-energy electron diffraction, there has been a great deal of progress in computing the diffracted electron beam intensities. Most of the special characteristics of low-energy electron scattering have been recognized. It has been shown that the magnitude of the backscattered intensity is more than 40 — 50% of the magnitude of the forward scattered beam intensity in the energy range of interest. Owing to the strong interaction between the incoming electrons and the ion cores in the solid, cross-sections for both elastic and inelastic scattering of electrons are about 106 times larger than for X-rays. The strong inelastic scattering effectively removes electrons from the incident or from the diffracted electron beam so that the elastically scattered fraction (which contains the diffraction information) that leaves the surface is 1 — 5 % of the total scattered intensity. The total reflectivity is low, of the order of 1%. The peak widths of the diffraction beams are broad, 4 — 20 eV, and there is a significant amount of multiple scattering. In spite of the multiple scattering events that complicate the intensity analysis, the large inelastic scattering restricts backscattering to about four atomic layers at the surface and greatly reduces the contribution of multiple scattering to the total scattered intensity. A scattering theory that takes into account all of the features of low-energy electrons diffracted from surfaces has been developed and applied successfully to computation of beam intensities from various aluminium crystal surfaces. The computer program to calculate surface structures from the diffracted beam intensities that appears at present to be the simplest uses the T-matrix formalism developed by Beeby and extended by Duke and Tucker to include inelastic damping of the electron beam. The outgoing beams each correspond to a two-dimensional reciprocal lattice vector, g, in the plane of the surface, and we consider only the elastic case where E represents incident and emerging electron energy. The number of electrons scattered elastically into the beam labelled by g is proportional to the scattering cross section, σ(g, E):
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (1)
where
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (2)
The vector dλ gives the position of the origin in the λlayer with respect to the origin in the surface layer. The incident and final electron wave vectors are respectively ki and kt and A is the area of a unit cell in a plane parallel to the surface. The delta function expresses the condition for the existence of the diffraction beams. The component of the outgoing beam parallel to the surface, kf[??], can differ from the parallel component of the incident beam, ki[??], only by one of the two-dimensional reciprocal lattice vectors, g, of the surface. Tλ is a T-matrix for scattering of an incident electron by the λth layer in the presence of the other layers. The quantity Tλ(kt, ki; E) can be obtained in a convenient algebraic form by means of a partial wave expansion using the conventional spherical harmonics, Ylm (k), where k is a vector whose spherical components are the angles θ and Φ,
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (3)
All directional information for the incident and outgoing beams is contained in the spherical harmonics, and the matrix, Tlm l'm'λ (E), is a function only of energy. Once this matrix is calculated, it is a simple matter to repeat the summation in equation (2) for all beams, g, of interest. It is customary to replace the double index (lm) by a single index (lm)] ->L. Using this notation, equation (2) can be written
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (4)
The scattering problem now reduces to calculating the matrix, TLL'λ E The first approximation made is to terminate the summations over L' and l yielding a matrix of finite dimensions. Most computer programs are capable of handling up to 36 × 36 matrices, which corresponds to a maximum I value of 5. The matrix TλLL' can then be obtained from the equation
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (5)
where
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (6)
and
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (7)
Equation (7) is a t-matrix for the elastic scattering of an incident electron of mass m and wave vector k from a potential characterized by a set of energy dependent phase shifts, δ(E). The only conditions on the potential at this point are that it be spherically symmetrical and that neighbouring potentials do not overlap. Laramore and Duke 9 have shown that lattice motion can be taken into consideration at this point by the renormalization of the site scattering vertices, tλ. The renormalized quantity bλ is expressed
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION OMITTED] (8)
where Wλ (kt-ki) is the Debye–Waller factor for the λth layer. If we use the Debye model for the phonon spectrum, the resulting matrix bλLL' is diagonal, as was tLL'λ. The effect of finite temperature is thus to alter the phase shifts, δi(E) appearing in equation (7). This is done internally in the computer program by expanding the exponential term in equation (8) in spherical harmonics. Provision is made in equation (8) for a layer-dependent Debye–Waller factor. The quantity τλLL' in equation (6) represents a t- matrix for scattering from a single plane λ parallel to the surface. The matrix GL"L"'sp is a subplane propagator which is calculated by a summation over the site positions in plane λ. In order to include the non-zero temperature effect, the quantities bλLL' described above should be substituted for tλLL'. Equation (5) completes the definition of TλLL' employing GL"L"'λλ' as the propagator matrix for scattering from layer λ to layer λ'. Thus, TλLL'is composed of the scattering of the plane wave from the λth layer, τλLL', plus the contributions from all possible interplane scattering combinations ending on layer λ. The matrix equation (6) can be inverted to yield an exact expression for τλ,
τλ = [τλ-1 - Gsp](9)
Equation (5) can be similarly inverted, but the summation over the total number of layers, λ' ≠ λ, leads to a matrix of impractically large dimensions. In practice one truncates the calculation by considering only several of the outermost layers in the surface region. Satisfactory results are obtained by writing equation (5) as a perturbation expansion and iterating until the desired accuracy is obtained. Owing to the inelastic damping factor which appears in the expression for the interplane propagator Gλλ, this convergence is rapid and reliable.
The input parameters mentioned in the foregoing description of the computer program may be systematically varied. Among these are the number of phase shifts used to characterize the ion core site potential (maximum l value), the number of outer crystal layers included in the summation (λ), the order of multiple scattering considered in the iterative solution of equation (5), and the effect of the layer-dependent Debye–Waller factor. The calculations are performed in the energy range between 40 and 150 eV, where most of the diffraction information about the structure of the surface is obtained. At lower energies the inner potential changes rapidly, based on free electron gas calculations, and experimental difficulties can occur in determining the precise angle of incidence of the electron beam owing to small stray magnetic fields. At energies in excess of 150 eV, a larger number of phase shifts (lmax > 5) must be employed to characterize the ion core potential. The penetration depths of the beam are approximately proportional to [square root of E], giving rise to increased sampling of the bulk structure at higher energies.
Ion-core Potentials and Energy-dependent Phase Shifts. — The scattering potential at the lattice site is specified by a number of precalculated energy-dependent phase shifts, δi(E). These phase shifts may be obtained at present from self-consistent APW potentials or by the ab initio method of Pendry. Apparently the description of the scattering process by these two methods is of sufficient accuracy to yield qualitatively correct theoretical beam intensities vs. incident electron energy (I vs. eV) curves. However, as closer agreement with experiment is sought and as surface overlayers (especially molecular overlayers) are investigated, it may be necessary to investigate these scattering potentials in more detail.
The first numerical results obtained by Duke and Tucker were based on an s-wave approximation to the scattering amplitudes. Since that time, calculations for aluminium have appeared utilizing from 3 to 8 phase shifts (Figure 1). It is apparent from the I vs. eV curves calculated using only the first two phase shifts, that for aluminium they are poor approximations to the observed intensity patterns. There is a remarkable qualitative similarity between all the curves calculated and experimental I vs. eV curves which include more than two phase shifts. Tong and Rhodin have pointed out the dominance of d-wave scattering for energies in excess of 24 eV. The low scattering power of the l = 0 partial wave can be explained by the (2l + 1) weighting factor which appears in each term of the expansion for the scattering amplitude f(θ), even though the magnitude of the phase shift may be large. This feature will persist in all materials. In conclusion, five phase shifts give the best agreement with the experimental I vs. eV curves for all (111), (100), and (110) aluminium surfaces.
The Effect of including Various Numbers of Layers Parallel to the Surface in the Calculation. — Owing to the large inelastic damping parameter corresponding to an attenuation length of from 4 to 10 Å within the crystal at low electron energies (at less than 200 eV), the major portion of the elastic LEED scattering arises from events in the outermost layers of the sample. Not surprisingly, the consideration of only three surface layers is sufficient to yield diffraction beam intensities comparable with more exact treatments (Figure 2). The interlayer spacing for the aluminium (100) surface is 2.02 Å and the inelastic damping length is 6.4 Å at 50 eV, and 7.7 Å at 100 eV, for a free electron gas whose density is the same as that of the aluminium conduction electrons. Thus, the amplitude of the electrons scattered kinematically, the most favourable case, from the fourth layer, is diminished by a factor of 0.15 to 0.2 compared with one scattered from the surface layer.
Multiple Scattering: Order and Temperature Effects. — The iterative method used to solve equation (5) indicates that third-order diffraction yields results that are very close to those obtained from matrix inversion for the various aluminium crystal faces, differing by a maximum of 10% at high energies (Figure 3). Thus multiple scattering events that involve higher-order diffraction can be neglected. The elastic force constants between the outermost surface layer and the bulk can be different from those between two bulk layers. As a result, the Debye temperature assigned to the surface layer may be quite different from the bulk value. However, the peak intensities arc uniformly diminished owing to the larger average thermal displacement of the outermost layer, and no shifts in the beam positions are observed. At the present state of theoretical accuracy there is no reason to include layer-dependent Debye temperatures when working with a clean metal crystal, as the intensity ratios and the qualitative appearance of the patterns change only slightly. Separate surface values of θD should be included in the calculation of intensity curves from metals covered by overlayers of different materials since the Debye temperature may differ significantly and the effect of this difference may vary between integral and fractional order peaks. Studies of the temperature dependence of the diffraction beam intensity have given detailed information about the mean square displacement of surface atoms, via the Debye–Waller factor, and also about thermal diffuse scattering. The Debye–Waller factor determined for surface atoms has shown that the mean square displacement of these atoms in most face-centred cubic and body-centred cubic surfaces, perpendicular to the surface, is appreciably larger than the bulk atom mean square displacement. This mean square displacement is sensitive to the structure of the surface and to the presence of adsorbed layers at the surface. Thus a great deal of information about the lattice dynamics of surface atoms can be obtained from these measurements. It was found that near normal incidence, kinematic analysis of the data approximates well the analysis that is carried out in the multiple scattering framework. Future studies in this field will include investigation of the effect of adsorbed layers on the mean square displacement of surface atoms, and studies of the zero-point vibration of surface atoms by carrying out Debye–Waller measurements at low temperatures. It would be important to determine the mean square displacement of surface atoms parallel to the surface plane, a measurement that is quite difficult under present experimental circumstances. However, the anisotropy of the mean square displacement of surface atoms is an important piece of information for detailed surface lattice dynamics calculations.
Excerpted from Surface and Defect Properties of Solids Volume 2 by M. W. Roberts, J. M. Thomas. Copyright © 1973 The Chemical Society. Excerpted by permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry.
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