The structure of silicene, the two-dimensional honeycomb sheet of Si, grown on Ag(111) was investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) combined with density functional theory (DFT) calculation. Two atomic arrangements of honeycomb configuration were found by STM, which are confirmed by LEED and DFT calculations; one is 4×4 and the other is √13×√13 R13.9°. In the 4×4 structure, the honeycomb lattice remains with six atoms displaced vertically, whereas the √13×√13 R13.9° takes the regularly buckled honeycomb geometry.
We demonstrate that silicene, a 2D honeycomb lattice consisting of Si atoms, loses its Dirac fermion characteristics due to substrate-induced symmetry breaking when synthesized on the Ag(111) surface. No Landau level sequences appear in the tunneling spectra under a magnetic field, and density functional theory calculations show that the band structure is drastically modified by the hybridization between the Si and Ag atoms. This is the first direct example demonstrating the lack of Dirac fermions in a single layer honeycomb lattice due to significant symmetry breaking.
The Kondo effect caused by the adsorption of iron phthalocyanine (FePc) on Au(111) was investigated by the combination of density functional theory and a numerical renormalization group calculation with scanning tunneling microscopy. We found that a novel Kondo effect is realized for a single FePc molecule on Au(111) by tuning the symmetry of the ligand field through the local coordination to the substrate. For FePc in the on top configuration where fourfold symmetry around the Fe(2+) ion is held, the orbital degrees of freedom survive, resulting in the spin+orbital SU(4) Kondo effect. In contrast, the reduced symmetry in the bridge configuration freezes the orbital degrees of freedom, leading to the spin SU(2) Kondo effect. These results provide a novel example to manipulate the many-body phenomena by tuning the local symmetry.
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