14-02
Atomic
layering and misfit-induced densification at the Si(111)/In solid-liquid
interface,
Surface
Science 621 (2014) 69-76
V. Vonk, M. Cremers, A. de Jong, S. Pintea, E. Vlieg,
Abstract: We report on the solid–liquid interface
structure between Si(111) substrates and indium at temperatures just above its
melting point. At similar metal–semiconductor interfaces, liquid density
enhancements have been observed by Reichert et al. [1]. Our surface x-ray
diffraction study reveals that there is pronounced layering of the liquid near
the interface. The data allow for identifying both layering length scales: the
interlayer distance of 2.2 Å̊ and the decay length of approximately 15
Å̊. Furthermore do we find the very first layer of indium adjacent to the
Si(111) to be partially laterally ordered at the substrate's hollow sites. We
introduce a hard sphere packing model that can explain the experimentally
observed layering distance and anisotropic order. This packing also reveals
that due to the misfit between the size of the indium atoms and the periodicity
of the substrate, the indium atoms can pack together closer than in the bulk
liquid. These results show that the lateral interaction between the substrate
and the liquid directly influences the layering distance and that the resulting
packing can account for part of the previously observed enhanced densities.