University of Wollongong
Browse

Epitaxial growth mechanism of silicene on Ag(111)

Download (380.12 kB)
conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 05:40 authored by Xun XuXun Xu, Jincheng Zhuang, Yi Du, Stefan Eilers, Germanas PeleckisGermanas Peleckis, Wai Kong Yeoh, Xiaolin WangXiaolin Wang, Shi DouShi Dou, Ke-Hui Wu
We report on the epitaxial growth mechanism of silicene layers fabricated on a Ag(111) surface by molecular beam epitaxial deposition. The coverage effect and the structural defects have been characterized using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). It is found that substrate temperature plays an important role in the formation of silicene in different structures. Several kinds of defects are observed in different phases of silicene, which are most likely induced by the low coverage effect and the structural mismatch between the silicene and the Ag(111) surface. The Silicene sheet prefers to first emerge at the terrace edge of the substrate. Our results indicate that the growth mechanism of silicene follows the Stranski-Krastanov growth mode for all structures.

Funding

Combined scanning tunnelling microscope system for materials characterisation and manipulation at nano scale

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

A complete near-field scanning optical microscope for advanced characterisation of novel and functional materials

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

Design and exploration of novel p-block materials for visible light photocatalysis

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Citation

Xu, X., Zhuang, J., Du, Y., Eilers, S., Peleckis, G., Yeoh, W., Wang, X., Dou, S. Xue. & Wu, K. (2014). Epitaxial growth mechanism of silicene on Ag(111). Proceedings of the 2014 International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (pp. 28-30). United States: IEEE.

Parent title

Proceedings of the 2014 International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, ICONN 2014

Pagination

28-30

Language

English

Notes

ISBN: 9781479935215

RIS ID

96978

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC