JPhys Materials (Jan 2024)

Seeking borophene on Ni3Al(111): an experimental characterization of boron segregation and oxidation

  • Y Y Grisan Qiu,
  • P Biasin,
  • P Mantegazza,
  • S Baronio,
  • M Heinrich,
  • M K Muntwiler,
  • E Vesselli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7639/ad278c
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. 025004

Abstract

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Synthesis of a stable, well ordered honeycomb borophene (hB) phase has been achieved to date by exploiting Al(111) as a growth substrate, which provides the necessary charge doping to compensate the high hexagonal-holes density. However, B/Al(111) is governed by a strong B–Al interaction so to yield the actual formation of an AlB _2 hB phase. Dilution of aluminum by alloying could then in principle weaken the boron-support bonding. By means of a combined spectroscopy and microscopy experimental approach, we find instead that the growth of boron layers on the Ni _3 Al(111) alloy termination is driven by B dissolution into the bulk and surface segregation mechanisms. While no long-range ordered boron-induced phase is observed, locally ordered superstructural units with triangular appearance are stabilized by substrate pinning, following the chemical p (2 × 2) surface order. Oxidation involves both boron and aluminum, inducing surface segregation of B, while nickel remains in its metallic form.

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