Growth of epitaxially oriented Ag nanoislands on air-oxidized Si(111)-(7x7) surfaces: Influence of short range order on the substrate
Anupam Roy, K. Bhattacharjee, J. Ghatak, B. N. Dev

TL;DR
This study investigates how short-range order on air-oxidized Si(111) surfaces influences the epitaxial growth and orientation of Ag nanoislands, revealing that even with a thin oxide layer, epitaxial relationships are maintained.
Contribution
It demonstrates that short-range order on oxidized Si surfaces affects the epitaxial orientation of Ag nanoislands despite the presence of an oxide layer.
Findings
Ag nanoislands grow epitaxially at high temperatures
Short-range order influences Ag orientation
Twin formation occurs in Ag nanoislands
Abstract
Clean Si(111)-(7{x7) surfaces, followed by air-exposure, have been investigated by reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Fourier transforms (FTs) of STM images show the presence of short range (7x7) order on the air-oxidized surface. Comparison with FTs of STM images from a clean Si(111)-(7x7) surface shows that only the 1/7th order spots are present on the air-oxidized surface. The oxide layer is ~ 2-3 nm thick, as revealed by cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (XTEM). Growth of Ag islands on these air-oxidized Si(111)-(7x7) surfaces has been investigated by in-situ RHEED and STM and ex-situ XTEM and scanning electron microscopy. Ag deposition at room temperature leads to the growth of randomly oriented Ag islands while preferred orientation evolves when Ag is deposited at higher substrate temperatures. For deposition…
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