An overlayer is a layer of adatoms adsorbed onto a surface, for instance onto the surface of a single crystal.[1]
Adsorbed species on single crystal surfaces are frequently found to exhibit long-range ordering; that is to say that the adsorbed species form a well-defined overlayer structure. Each particular structure may only exist over a limited coverage range of the adsorbate, and in some adsorbate/substrate systems a whole progression of adsorbate structure are formed as the surface coverage is gradually increased.[2]
The periodicity of the overlayer (which often is larger than that of the substrate unit cell) can be determined by low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), because there will be additional diffraction beams associated with the overlayer.[3]
There are two types of overlayers: commensurate and incommensurate. In the former the substrate-adsorbate interaction tends to dominate over any lateral adsorbate-adsorbate interaction, while in the latter the adsorbate-adsorbate interactions are of similar magnitude to those between adsorbate and substrate.[4]
An overlayer on a substrate can be notated in either Wood's notation or matrix notation.[5]
Wood's notation takes the form
where M is the chemical symbol of the substrate, A is the chemical symbol of the overlayer, [math]\displaystyle{ (hk\ell) }[/math] are the Miller indices of the surface plane, R and [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] correspond to the rotational difference between the substrate and overlayer vectors, and the vector magnitudes shown are those of the substrate ([math]\displaystyle{ s }[/math] subscripts) and of the overlayer ([math]\displaystyle{ 0 }[/math] subscripts). This notation can only describe commensurate overlayers however, while matrix notation can describe both.
Matrix notation differs from Wood's notation in the second term, which is replaced by the [math]\displaystyle{ G }[/math] matrix that describes the overlayer primitive vectors in terms of the substrate primitive vectors:
and so hence matrix notation has the form
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overlayer.
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