Structural and electronic properties for oxygen-adsorbed graphene sheets have been explored using first-principles total-energy calculations within the local density functional theory. A finite energy gap emerges for the oxygen-adsorbed graphene and its value increases with the ratio of O∕C, as manifested by experiments. Further, adsorption energy and migration barrier for oxygen atoms on the graphene sheet have been investigated. The results show that isolated oxygen atoms are highly mobile and incline to condense on the graphene sheet.
We have devised a "square micro-four-point probe method" using an independently driven ultrahigh-vacuum four-tip scanning tunneling microscope, and succeeded for the first time to directly measure anisotropic electrical conductance of a single-atomic layer on a solid surface. A quasi-one-dimensional metal of a single-domain Si(111)4 x 1-In had a surface-state conductance along the metallic atom chains (sigma(axially)) to be 7.2(+/-0.6) x 10(-4) S/square at room temperature, which was larger than that in the perpendicular direction (sigma(radially)) by approximately 60 times. The sigma(axially) was consistently interpreted by a Boltzmann equation with the anisotropic surface-state band dispersion, while the sigma(radially) was dominated by a surface-space-charge-layer conductance.
The surface structure of the As-stabilized GaAs(001)-c(4 x 4) surface has been studied. We show that the seemingly established three As-dimer model is incompatible with experimental data and propose here a new structure model which has three Ga-As dimers per c(4 x 4) unit cell. This mixed dimer model, confirmed by the rocking-curve analysis of reflection high-energy electron diffraction and first-principles calculations, resolves disagreements in the interpretation of several previous experiments. A good agreement between the observed scanning tunneling microscopy image and the simulated one further confirms the newly proposed model.
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