Alkali halides are well-known for their tendency to form rock-salt-like crystal structures. Here we present a scanning tunneling microscopy study of a previously unreported alternative structure of one such alkali halide, RbI. When deposited on Ag(111) at a low submonolayer surface coverage, RbI forms islands with hexagonally coordinated atomic structures, in contrast to the expected rock-salt structures typically observed for such alkali halide films on metal surfaces. At a near-monolayer RbI surface coverage, we observe the coexistence of the hexagonally coordinated phase and a square-coordinated rock-salt-like RbI phase that is analogous to that observed for other alkali halides. Our density functional theory calculations for this system highlight the role of RbI−Ag interfacial charge transfer in defining the RbI structure and the impact of local atomic coordination on the RbI−Ag charge-transfer interaction.
Understanding
the local impact of environmental electronic perturbations
on the local density of states (LDOS) of single-walled carbon nanotubes
(CNTs) is critical for developing CNT-based devices. We present scanning
tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/STS) investigations of
CNTs adsorbed on both a metal, Au(111), and a dielectric, monolayer
RbI on Au(111), serving as models for stronger and weaker electrostatic
interactions, respectively. In both cases, STS revealed modulations
in the CNT LDOS corresponding to features in the underlying material.
We corroborate our STM/STS results with density functional theory
calculations of the electronic structure of semiconducting CNTs in
the presence and absence of an external dipole. DFT-calculated CNT
LDOS qualitatively matched STM/STS results, providing key insight
into the local impact external charges have on CNT electronic structure.
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