Major stable surface of silicon: Si(20 4 23)

Zheng Gai, R. G. Zhao, Wenjie Li, Y. Fujikawa, T. Sakurai, and W. S. Yang
Phys. Rev. B 64, 125201 – Published 4 September 2001
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Abstract

Clean and well-annealed Si(515), (516), and (405) surfaces have been investigated by means of scanning tunnel microscope (STM) and low-energy electron diffraction and it turns out that these surfaces are unstable while Si(20 4 23) is stable, because the former three all consist of {20 4 23} facets. On the basis of the high-resolution dual-bias STM images of the Si(20423)1×1 surface, a detailed structural model of the surface has been proposed for further investigation. As the unit cell of the Si(20 4 23) surface has its own structure rather than consisting of nanofacets of other stable surface(s) the surface is identified, by definition, as a major stable surface (or MAJOR). Interestingly, among all MAJOR’s of silicon that have been found so far (20 4 23) is the only one that silicon does not share with germanium.

  • Received 11 July 2000

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.64.125201

©2001 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Zheng Gai1,2, R. G. Zhao1, Wenjie Li1, Y. Fujikawa2, T. Sakurai2, and W. S. Yang1,*

  • 1Mesoscopic Physics Laboratory and Department of Physics, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
  • 2The Institute for Materials Research (IMR), Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8577, Japan

  • *Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic address: wsyang@pku.edu.cn

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Vol. 64, Iss. 12 — 15 September 2001

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