Ab initio study of ZnO (101¯0) surface relaxation

John E. Jaffe, Nicholas M. Harrison, and Anthony C. Hess
Phys. Rev. B 49, 11153 – Published 15 April 1994
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Abstract

Periodic Hartree-Fock total-energy calculations on two-dimensional slabs have been used to study the symmetry-conserving relaxation of the nonpolar (101¯0) surface of ZnO. We find that it is energetically favorable for the Zn-O surface dimers to tilt slightly (by 2.3 °) and move downwards towards the slab, and for the dimer bond to shorten significantly. Our results agree fairly well with those of a recent density-functional calculation, but disagree with empirical tight-binding theory which predicts surface bonds to shorten only slightly while the surface dimers undergo a large tilt (18 °). The available experimental data lies between the ab initio and tight-binding results with large error bars. We have tested the effects of several refinements of our Hartree-Fock calculation, including improvements of the orbital basis set and precision tolerances, the use of thicker slabs in approximating the semi-infinite crystal, and post-self-consistent-field density-functional correlation corrections to the total energy. None of these refinements significantly changed our results. We discuss possible reasons for the disagreement between our results and those of tight-binding theory.

  • Received 20 December 1993

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.11153

©1994 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

John E. Jaffe

  • Molecular Sciences Research Center, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, Richland, Washington 99352

Nicholas M. Harrison

  • SERC Daresbury Laboratory, Daresbury, Warrington WA4 4AD, United Kingdom

Anthony C. Hess

  • Molecular Sciences Research Center, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, Richland, Washington 99352

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Vol. 49, Iss. 16 — 15 April 1994

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