AI Article Synopsis

  • Palladium forms one-dimensional islands on a reduced SnO2(101) surface when vapor-deposited at room temperature, characterized by being one atomic layer high, 5 Å wide, and up to 350 Å long.
  • Scanning tunneling microscopy indicates that these islands do not merge with neighboring ones.
  • The growth of these 1D islands is influenced by strong interactions with Sn, lack of stable binding sites, and defect-mediated nucleation that determines the island's width.

Article Abstract

Palladium, vapor-deposited at room temperature on a reduced SnO2(101) surface, forms one-dimensional islands, one atomic layer high, 5 A wide, and up to 350 A long. Scanning tunneling microscopy shows that neighboring islands do not merge. First-principles calculations reveal the atomistic processes that lead to this, for metal oxide substrates unusual, overlayer growth. Formation of 1D islands is mediated by a large anisotropy in surface diffusion, strong Pd-Sn interaction, and the lack of stable binding sites at the sides of the Pd islands. Nucleation is defect mediated, and the initial nucleation site determines the width of the resulting nanocluster.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.186102DOI Listing

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