Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Interaction of W(CO)$_6$ with SiO$_2$ Surfaces -- A Density Functional Study

172   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Publication date 2011
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The interaction of tungsten hexacarbonyl W(CO)$_6$ precursor molecules with SiO$_2$ substrates is investigated by means of density functional theory calculations with and without inclusion of long range van der Waals interactions. We consider two different surface models, a fully hydroxylated and a partially hydroxylated SiO$_2$ surface, corresponding to substrates under different experimental conditions. For the fully hydroxylated surface we observe only a weak interaction between the precursor molecule and the substrate with physisorption of W(CO)$_6$. Inclusion of van der Waals corrections results in a stabilization of the molecules on this surface, but does not lead to significant changes in the chemical bonding. In contrast, we find a spontaneous dissociation of the precursor molecule on the partially hydroxylated SiO$_2$ surface where chemisorption of a W(CO)$_5$ fragment is observed upon removal of one of the CO ligands from the precursor molecule. Irrespective of the hydroxylation, the precursor molecule prefers binding of more than one of its CO ligands. In the light of these results, implications for the initial growth stage of tungsten nano-deposits on SiO$_2$ in an electron beam induced deposition process are discussed.

rate research

Read More

65 - B. Meyer , Dominik Marx 2002
An extensive theoretical investigation of the nonpolar (10$bar{1}$0) and (11$bar{2}$0) surfaces as well as the polar zinc terminated (0001)--Zn and oxygen terminated (000$bar{1}$)--O surfaces of ZnO is presented. Particular attention is given to the convergence properties of various parameters such as basis set, k--point mesh, slab thickness, or relaxation constraints within LDA and PBE pseudopotential calculations using both plane wave and mixed basis sets. The pros and cons of different approaches to deal with the stability problem of the polar surfaces are discussed. Reliable results for the structural relaxations and the energetics of these surfaces are presented and compared to previous theoretical and experimental data, which are also concisely reviewed and commented.
The study of zinc oxide, within the homogeneous electron gas approximation, results in overhybridization of zinc $3d$ shell with oxygen $2p$ shell, a problem shown for most transition metal chalcogenides. This problem can be partially overcome by using LDA+$U$ (or, GGA+$U$) methodology. However, in contrast to the zinc $3d$ orbital, Hubbard type correction is typically excluded for the oxygen $2p$ orbital. In this work, we provide results of electronic structure calculations of an oxygen vacancy in ZnO supercell from ab initio perspective, with two Hubbard type corrections, $U_{mathrm{Zn}-3d}$ and $U_{mathrm{O}-2p}$. The results of our numerical simulations clearly reveal that the account of $U_{mathrm{O}-2p}$ has a significant impact on the properties of bulk ZnO, in particular the relaxed lattice constants, effective mass of charge carriers as well as the bandgap. For a set of validated values of $U_{mathrm{Zn}-3d}$ and $U_{mathrm{O}-2p}$ we demonstrate the appearance of a localized state associated with the oxygen vacancy positioned in the bandgap of the ZnO supercell. Our numerical findings suggest that the defect state is characterized by the highest overlap with the conduction band states as obtained in the calculations with no Hubbard-type correction included. We argue that the electronic density of the defect state is primarily determined by Zn atoms closest to the vacancy.
Solid-liquid interfaces are at the heart of many modern-day technologies and provide a challenge to many materials simulation methods. A realistic first-principles computational study of such systems entails the inclusion of solvent effects. In this work we implement an implicit solvation model that has a firm theoretical foundation into the widely used density-functional code VASP. The implicit solvation model follows the framework of joint density functional theory. We describe the framework, our algorithm and implementation, and benchmarks for small molecular systems. We apply the solvation model to study the surface energies of different facets of semiconducting and metallic nanocrystals and the S$_{text{N}} 2$ reaction pathway. We find that solvation reduces the surface energies of the nanocrystals, especially for the semiconducting ones and increases the energy barrier of the S$_{text{N}} 2$ reaction.
85 - Kazutaka Nagao , 2003
The structural, electronic, and adhesive properties of Cu/SiO$_2$ interfaces are investigated using first-principles density-functional theory within the local density approximation. Interfaces between fcc Cu and $alpha$-cristobalite(001) surfaces with different surface stoichiometries are considered. Interfacial properties are found to be sensitive to the choice of the termination, and the oxygen density at the substrate surface is the most important factor influencing the strength of adhesion. For oxygen-rich interfaces, the O atoms at the interface substantially rearrange after the deposition of Cu layers, suggesting the formation of Cu-O bonds. Significant hybridization between Cu$-d$ and O$-p$ states is evident in site-projected density of states at the interface. As oxygen is systematically removed from the interface, less rearrangement is observed, implying weaker adhesion. Computed adhesion energies for each of the interfaces are found to reflect these observed structural and bonding trends, leading to the largest adhesion energy in the oxygen rich cases. The adhesion energy is also calculated between Cu and SiO$_2$ substrates terminated with hydroxyl groups, and adhesion of Cu to these substrates is found to be considerably reduced. This work supports the notion that Cu films can adhere well to hydroxyl-free SiO$_2$ substrates should oxygen be present in sufficient amounts at the interface.
We demonstrate the accuracy of the hybrid functional HSE06 for computing band offsets of semiconductor alloy heterostructures. The highlight of this study is the computation of conduction band offsets with a reliability that has eluded standard density functional theory. A high-quality special quasirandom structure models an infinite random pseudobinary alloy for constructing heterostructures along the (001) growth direction. Our excellent results for a variety of heterostructures establish HSE06s relevance to band engineering of high-performance electrical and optoelectronic devices.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا