Quantum size effects in the low temperature layer-by-layer growth of Pb on Ge(001)
L. Floreano, D. Cvetko, F. Bruno, G. Bavdek, A. Cossaro, R. Gotter, A., Verdini, A. Morgante (Lab. TASC-INFM, Trieste, Italy)

TL;DR
This study investigates quantum size effects in low-temperature layer-by-layer growth of Pb on Ge(001), revealing oscillatory structural variations and surface relaxations influenced by quantum confinement at the nanoscale.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of quantum size effects affecting the morphology and atomic structure of Pb films grown on Ge(001) at low temperatures.
Findings
Oscillatory changes in step height during growth.
Topmost layer displacement mainly causes observed effects.
Surface relaxation influences surface phonon dispersion.
Abstract
The electronic properties of thin metallic films deviate from the corresponding bulk ones when the film thickness is comparable with the wavelength of the electrons at the Fermi level due to quantum size effects (QSE). QSE are expected to affect the film morphology and structure leading to the low temperature (LT) ``electronic growth'' of metals on semiconductors. In particular, layer-by-layer growth of Pb(111) films has been reported for deposition on Ge(001) below 130 K. An extremely flat morphology is preserved throughout deposition from four up to a dozen of monolayers. These flat films are shown to be metastable and to reorganize into large clusters uncovering the first Pb layer, pseudomorphic to the substrate, already at room temperature. Indications of QSE induced structural variations of the growing films have been reported for Pb growth on Ge(001), where the apparent height of…
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