Mode damping in a commensurate monolayer solid

L. W. Bruch and F. Y. Hansen
Phys. Rev. B 55, 1782 – Published 15 January 1997
PDFExport Citation

Abstract

The normal modes of a commensurate monolayer solid may be damped by mixing with elastic waves of the substrate. This was shown by Hall, Mills, and Black [Phys. Rev. B 32, 4932 (1985)], for perpendicular adsorbate vibrations in the presence of an isotropic elastic medium. That work is generalized with an elastic-continuum theory of the response of modes of either parallel or perpendicular polarization for a spherical adsorbate on a hexagonal substrate. The results are applied to the discussion of computer simulations and inelastic atomic-scattering experiments for adsorbates on graphite. The extreme anisotropy of the elastic behavior of the graphite leads to quite different wave-vector dependence of the damping for modes polarized perpendicular and parallel to the substrate. A phenomenological extension of the elasticity theory of the graphite to include bond-bending energies improves the description of substrate modes with strong anomalous dispersion, and enables a semiquantitative account of observed avoided crossings of the adlayer perpendicular vibration mode and the substrate Rayleigh mode.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.55.1782

    ©1997 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    L. W. Bruch

    • Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

    F. Y. Hansen

    • Department of Physical Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark, FKI-206-DTU, DK-2800, Lyngby, Denmark

    References (Subscription Required)

    Click to Expand
    Issue

    Vol. 55, Iss. 3 — 15 January 1997

    Reuse & Permissions
    Access Options
    Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

    Authorization Required


    ×
    ×

    Images

    ×

    Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Physical Review B

    Log In

    Cancel
    ×

    Search


    Article Lookup

    Paste a citation or DOI

    Enter a citation
    ×