Shaoning Yao, Wei-Tsu Tseng, et al.
ADMETA 2011
Surface reflectance spectroscopy (SRS) has been used to study chemisorption-induced changes in the electronic structure of a clean W(100) surface. The relative changes in optical reflectance, RR, caused by chemisorption of H2 CO, and O2 have been measured as a function of exposure and photon energy in the range 0.6<<4.8 eV for adatom coverages up to 1 monolayer. Structure in the exposure and coverage dependence of RR displays the various adatom binding states and also indicates the presence of adatom-adatom interactions within a given binding state. The model of McIntyre and Aspnes (MA) is adopted to relate the observed RR() to changes in an effective complex surface dielectric function ^s(); by assuming a simple form for ^s(), we fit RR() spectra calculated using the MA model to the experimental data and thereby obtain difference spectra ^s() which show the chemisorption-induced changes in the optical response of the surface region. The positions of prominent peaks and dips in 2s(=Im^s) give the energies of important optical transitions associated with the surface electronic structure which are produced or quenched by chemisorption. These energies show a strong correlation with the position of surface levels (relative to the Fermi energy EF) seen in ultraviolet photoemission and field-emission spectroscopies. As a result, the excitations obtained from SRS are attributed to optical transitions from intrinsic surface states and adsorbate-induced surface orbitals to final states concentrated primarily at EF, which are most likely the tails of extended (Bloch) states of the metal as modified at the surface. © 1974 The American Physical Society.
Shaoning Yao, Wei-Tsu Tseng, et al.
ADMETA 2011
C.M. Brown, L. Cristofolini, et al.
Chemistry of Materials
L.K. Wang, A. Acovic, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 1993
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997