Thermodynamic Stability and Structure of Oxidized Cu(110) Surfaces: The Critical Role of non-Local Interactions
ORAL
Abstract
Thermodynamic stability of oxidized Cu(110) surface is studied using DFT techniques. At high oxygen exposures standard techniques predict more phases to be quasi-isoenergetic, whereas experiments observe only the $c$(6 $\times$ 2) phase at high oxygen exposures clearly indicating this phase to be the ground-state separated by considerable energy differences from other candidates. We show that this surface system is stabilized by a delicate coexistence and balance of chemi- and physi-sorption. Agreement with experiments is only achieved if the van der Waals interaction between the surface templates is accounted for in DFT thermodynamics. Moreover, van der Waals stabilization of the surface structure is anticipated to be a general feature present also in the cases of other related surfaces.
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Authors
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Joseph Bamidele
Dept. of Physics, King's College London, U.K., Dept. of Physics, King's College London, The Strand, London, U.K.
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Jan Brndiar
Inst. of Physics, Slovak Acad. of Sciences, 84511 Bratislava, Slovakia
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Ivan Stich
Institute of Physics, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia, Inst. of Physics, Slovak Acad. of Sciences, 84511 Bratislava, Slovakia
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Lev Kantorovitch
Dept. of Physics, King's College London, U.K., Dept. of Physics, King's College London, The Strand, London, U.K.