Dimerization of Ag adatoms on Si(100) at surprisingly low temperature due to adatom migration on top of Si-dimer rows
Alejandro Pe\~na-Torres, Michail Stamatakis, Hannes J\'onsson

TL;DR
This study explains the low-temperature formation of Ag adimer on Si(100) by simulating adatom migration, revealing that migration on top of Si dimer rows facilitates dimerization even at 140 K.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Ag adatom migration on Si dimer rows, rather than transient hot spots, drives dimer formation at low temperatures, supported by comprehensive simulations.
Findings
Ag adatoms predominantly land on Si dimer rows.
Migration on top of dimer rows enables dimerization at low temperatures.
Most deposited Ag atoms form dimers at 140 K.
Abstract
The puzzling experimental observations of Ag addimer formation on the Si(100) surface upon vapor deposition at low temperature, even as low as 140 K, reported by Huang et al. [Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2021, 23, 4161], is explained by facile thermal migration on top of the Si dimer rows, while diffusion is inactive once an Ag adatom lands in one of the optimal binding sites in between dimer rows. The previously hypothesized transient mobility due to the hot spot formed as an Ag atom lands on the Si surface is found not to contribute significantly to mobility and dimer formation. The experimental conditions are simulated by a combination of classical dynamics calculations of the deposition events, systematic searches of saddle points representing transition states for thermally activated events and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of long timescale evolution of the system over a temperature…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies · Semiconductor materials and interfaces
