4.6 Article

Atomic and mesoscopic structure of Dy-based surface alloys on noble metals

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/ac5c17

Keywords

surface alloy; STM; LEED; structure characterization; Moire structure

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [TRR 173-268565370]
  2. Dynamics and Topology Center - State of Rhineland Palatinate

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This study examines the atomic and mesoscopic structural details of three different binary rare-earth-noble metals surface alloys. The research reveals different surface alloy structures, with DyAg2 surface alloy showing an inhomogeneous local structure. The findings demonstrate that surface alloying is an effective tool for tuning metallic heterostructures.
Surface alloys are a highly flexible class of low dimensional materials with the opportunity to tune and control the spin and charge carrier functionalities on the nanoscale. Here, we focus on the atomic and mesoscopic structural details of three distinct binary rare-earth-noble metals (NM) surface alloys by employing scanning tunneling microscopy and low energy electron diffraction. Using Dysprosium as the guest element on fcc(111) NM substrates, we identify the formation of non-commensurate surface alloy superstructures, which lead to homogeneous moire patterns for DyCu2/Cu(111) and DyAu2/Au(111), while an inhomogeneous one is found for DyAg2/Ag(111). The local structure was analyzed for these samples and the observed differences are discussed in the light of the lattice mismatches of the alloy layer with respect to the underlying substrate. For the particularly intriguing case of a DyAg2 surface alloy, the surface alloy layer does not show a uniform long-range periodic structure, but consists of local hexagonal tiles separated by extended domain walls, which occur likely to relieve the in-plane strain within the DyAg2 surface alloy layer. Our findings clearly demonstrate that surface alloying is an intriguing tool to tailor the local atomic structure as well as the mesoscopic moire structures of metallic heterostructures.

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