Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2432114
Title: Reassessment of the molecular mechanisms for H2 thermal desorption pathways from Si(1-x)Gex(001)-(2×1) surfaces
Authors: Li, Q.
Tok, E.S. 
Zhang, J.
Chuan Kang, H. 
Issue Date: 2007
Citation: Li, Q., Tok, E.S., Zhang, J., Chuan Kang, H. (2007). Reassessment of the molecular mechanisms for H2 thermal desorption pathways from Si(1-x)Gex(001)-(2×1) surfaces. Journal of Chemical Physics 126 (4) : -. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2432114
Abstract: One of the aims of temperature-programmed desorption experiments is to facilitate identification of molecular pathways for desorption. The authors provide a rigorous assessment of the difficulty of doing this for H2 Si(1-x) Gex (100) - (2×1). An extensive series of density functional calculations using both cluster and slab methods is performed. The resulting desorption barriers are used to compute thermal desorption spectra. A mean-field approximation is used to treat the populations of the various adsites present on the surface. The authors find a number of significant results. First, slab and cluster calculations do not appear to predict consistent differences in desorption barriers between intradimer and interdimer channels. Second, they find that a germanium atom affects the desorption barrier significantly only if it is present at the adsite. A germanium atom adjacent to an adsite or in the second layer influences the desorption barrier negligibly. Both cluster and slab calculations consistently predict a decrease of approximately 0.3-0.4 eV per germanium atom at the adsite. Third, current analysis of thermal desorption spectra in the literature, although yielding good fits to experimental data, is not rigorous. The authors' calculated spectra can be fitted rather well by assuming, as in current analysis of experimental data, three independent second-order channels, even though the underlying molecular pathways used to calculate the spectra are considerably different. Fourth, the authors' results highlight the importance of treating the rearrangement of hydrogen and germanium atoms at the surface during the thermal desorption process. This is generally not taken into account in kinetics modeling of desorption spectra. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.
Source Title: Journal of Chemical Physics
URI: http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/94695
ISSN: 00219606
DOI: 10.1063/1.2432114
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications

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