Physical Review X (Sep 2017)

Polaron-Driven Surface Reconstructions

  • Michele Reticcioli,
  • Martin Setvin,
  • Xianfeng Hao,
  • Peter Flauger,
  • Georg Kresse,
  • Michael Schmid,
  • Ulrike Diebold,
  • Cesare Franchini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.031053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. 031053

Abstract

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Geometric and electronic surface reconstructions determine the physical and chemical properties of surfaces and, consequently, their functionality in applications. The reconstruction of a surface minimizes its surface free energy in otherwise thermodynamically unstable situations, typically caused by dangling bonds, lattice stress, or a divergent surface potential, and it is achieved by a cooperative modification of the atomic and electronic structure. Here, we combined first-principles calculations and surface techniques (scanning tunneling microscopy, non-contact atomic force microscopy, scanning tunneling spectroscopy) to report that the repulsion between negatively charged polaronic quasiparticles, formed by the interaction between excess electrons and the lattice phonon field, plays a key role in surface reconstructions. As a paradigmatic example, we explain the (1×1) to (1×2) transition in rutile TiO_{2}(110).