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Silicon carbide (SiC) is an excellent substrate for growth and manipulation of large scale, high quality epitaxial graphene. On the carbon face (the ($bar{1}bar{1}bar{1}$) or $(000bar{1}$) face, depending on the polytype), the onset of graphene growth is intertwined with the formation of several competing surface phases, among them a (3$times$3) precursor phase suspected to hinder the onset of controlled, near-equilibrium growth of graphene. Despite more than two decades of research, the precise atomic structure of this phase is still unclear. We present a new model of the (3$times$3)-SiC-($bar{1}bar{1}bar{1}$) reconstruction, derived from an {it ab initio} random structure search based on density functional theory including van der Waals effects. The structure consists of a simple pattern of five Si adatoms in bridging and on-top positions on an underlying, C-terminated substrate layer, leaving one C atom per (3$times$3) unit cell formally unsaturated. Simulated scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) images are in excellent agreement with previously reported experimental STM images.
We address the stability of the surface phases that occur on the C-side of 3C-SiC($bar{1} bar{1} bar{1}$) at the onset of graphene formation. In this growth range, experimental reports reveal a coexistence of several surface phases. This coexistence
We have performed electronic state calculations to clarify the initial stage of the oxidation of the Si- and C-faces in 4H-SiC based on the density-functional theory. We investigate how each Si and C atomic site is oxidized on C- and Si-face, and exp
We perform density functional theory calculations for the determination of the structural and electronic properties of epitaxial graphene on 4H-SiC(000$bar{1}$). Using commensurate supercells that minimize non-physical stresses we show that, in contr
The c(6x2) is a reconstruction of the SrTiO3(001) surface that is formed between 1050-1100oC in oxidizing annealing conditions. This work proposes a model for the atomic structure for the c(6x2) obtained through a combination of results from transmis
We present a systematic study of the atomic and electronic structure of the Si(111)-(5x2)-Au reconstruction using first-principles electronic structure calculations based on the density functional theory. We analyze the structural models proposed by