Surface defects and their influence on surface properties
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2013
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IOP Publishing Ltd
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De La Fuente, O. R., González-Barrio, M. A., Navarro, V., Pabón, B. M., Palacio, I., & Mascaraque, A. (2013). Surface defects and their influence on surface properties. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 25(48), 484008. https://doi.org/10.1088/0953-8984/25/48/484008
Abstract
Surface defects have a profound influence on many attributes of materials, therefore experimental techniques and specific studies focused on their controlled generation and properties are mandatory. We have carried out a thorough study of the role of surface defects on a variety of physico-chemical properties of metals and oxides, using different experimental techniques and molecular dynamics simulations. In particular, we have studied the defects formed upon bombardment with Ar+ ions in a reconstructed Au(100) surface at very low ion doses. At room temperature, the pristine defects are mainly single vacancies, which diffuse by collective atomic motions, then cluster and collapse, resulting in 2D dislocation dipoles. These dislocations exhibit an enhanced chemical reactivity due to the elastic stress of their cores. We have also performed indentation tests of flat and stepped Au(111) samples with an atomic force microscope, revealing noticeable differences in their mechanical behavior when probed at the nanoscale. Thus, the stepped sample has a 20% smaller Young's modulus, 40% smaller yield point and 50% smaller shear stress. These differences, as well as reversible, quasiplastic behavior of the stepped sample up to a critical load, are due to the active role of steps as dislocation nucleation centers. In contrast, a TiO2(110) surface, modified with ion bombardment, does not show noticeable changes in its nanomechanical properties, which is an indication of the very different mechanical responses of oxides compared to simple metals at the nanoscale. Finally, we show how surface defects affect the chemical activity of a Pt(111) surface when exposed to methanol. The nature of the adsorbed species and the dynamics of the surface reactions are modified in the presence of surface defects, rendering the defective surface into a more robust state against catalytic poisoning.