The silicon counterpart of graphene, the so called "silicene", has been so far a fascinating theoretical hypothesis, but only recent efforts have pushed it to concrete evidence thus triggering a tremendous interest in silicene for electronic applications and fundamental investigations. Indeed, in addition to graphene, silicene is expected to provide an intimate affinity with the Sibased technology but, unlike graphene, the silicene appears as a buckled lattice where various superstructures take place depending on the periodic distribution of buckled bonds. Here we elucidate the atomistic details of the 4x4 and ?13 × ?13 silicene superstructures epitaxially grown on Ag(111) substrates. These silicene layers have been successfully encapsulated with Al2O3 in order to access ex situ Raman spectroscopy. The Raman spectrum of the encapsulated silicene has been self-consistently interpreted upon comparison with ab initio calculated spectra. In addition to the presence of the double degenerate E2g mode, typical for honeycomb lattices, the non-uniform bond length and the nonsymmetric buckling in the silicene layer introduce an intrinsic disorder which gives rise to disorder activated Raman extra-peaks.

Structural and chemical stabilization of the epitaxial silicene

Molle A;Cinquanta E;Grazianetti C;
2013

Abstract

The silicon counterpart of graphene, the so called "silicene", has been so far a fascinating theoretical hypothesis, but only recent efforts have pushed it to concrete evidence thus triggering a tremendous interest in silicene for electronic applications and fundamental investigations. Indeed, in addition to graphene, silicene is expected to provide an intimate affinity with the Sibased technology but, unlike graphene, the silicene appears as a buckled lattice where various superstructures take place depending on the periodic distribution of buckled bonds. Here we elucidate the atomistic details of the 4x4 and ?13 × ?13 silicene superstructures epitaxially grown on Ag(111) substrates. These silicene layers have been successfully encapsulated with Al2O3 in order to access ex situ Raman spectroscopy. The Raman spectrum of the encapsulated silicene has been self-consistently interpreted upon comparison with ab initio calculated spectra. In addition to the presence of the double degenerate E2g mode, typical for honeycomb lattices, the non-uniform bond length and the nonsymmetric buckling in the silicene layer introduce an intrinsic disorder which gives rise to disorder activated Raman extra-peaks.
2013
Istituto per la Microelettronica e Microsistemi - IMM
Inglese
224th ECS Meeting
58
217
227
http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-84904858559&origin=inward
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
10/2013
San Francisco (CA)
silicene
2D materials
10
none
Molle, A; Chiappe, D; Cinquanta, E; Grazianetti, C; Grazianetti, C; Fanciulli, M; Fanciulli, M; Scalise, E; Van Den Broek, B; Houssa, M
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
   Strongly anisotropic Graphite-like semiconductor/dielectric 2D nanolattices
   2D-NANOLATTICES
   FP7
   270749
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/312385
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