Liquid alloy shows solid-like crystal structure at surface
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ARGONNE, Ill. (July 7, 2006) – A substance used in nanotechnology contains
unusual structures at its surface, a team of researchers led by Oleg Shpyrko,
Distinguished Postdoctoral Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne
National Laboratory has learned.
The research results, developed at the Center
for Nanoscale Materials at Argonne, are published today in the journal Science.
The substance in question is a gold-silicon eutectic alloy, 82 percent gold
and 18 percent silicon. The term eutectic means that the combination melts
at a temperature lower than that of the melting temperature of either of its
components. For most eutectic alloys, the difference between the melting point
of the alloy and those of its pure components is about 100 degrees Celsius;
the gold-silicon eutectic alloy melts about 1,000 °C lower than either
of its components, at 360 °C (680 °F).
But that's not the only unusual thing about the gold-silicon eutectic alloy.
In a crystalline solid, atoms are arranged in an orderly, periodic fashion,
and in a liquid, arrangements of atoms are disordered. It's been known for
about 10 years that many metallic liquids show two or three distinct atomic
layers near the surface, and usually there is no crystalline-like order within
these layers. However, Shpyrko and his colleagues found that the gold-silicon
eutectic alloy has seven or eight layers near its surface. In trying to understand
this unexpected development, they found also that the top-most surface layer
includes a crystal-like structure, similar to that normally found only in solid
substances.
Understanding characteristics of novel surface phases like this surface-frozen
monolayer is important for the growing realm of nanotechnology, in which the
basic unit of measurement is a billionth of a meter.
“By the time you reduce the size of an object or device down to one nanometer,
practically everything is surfaces and interfaces,” Shpyrko said. “We need
to understand what the new laws of physics and chemistry that govern the surface
structures are.”
Gold and silicon are especially important to understand because they are used
in computer technology. Gold is an oxide-resistant “noble” metal that is easily
shaped into tiny computer chip interconnects, and silicon is the principal
component of most semiconductor devices.
“If you think about it, you have gold and silicon in contact with each other
in about every electronic device,” Shpyrko said.
Shpyrko began the research as a doctoral student at Harvard University and
finished it at Argonne. He used Argonne's Advanced
Photon Source, which provides
the most brilliant X-ray beams available in the Western Hemisphere, to perform
several tests on the material: X-ray specular reflectivity, which provides
information about atomic structure normal to the surface; X-ray grazing incidence
diffraction, which provides information about in-plane structure; X-ray diffuse
scattering, which provides information about waves and other dynamics at the
surface; and X-ray crystal truncation rod, which measures thickness and structure
of the crystalline surface layer.
Co-authors on the Science article were Reinhard Streitel, Venkatachalapathy
S.K. Balagurusamy, Alexei Y. Grigoriev and Prof. Peter S. Pershan of Harvard
University; Prof. Moshe Deutsch of Bar-Ilan
University in Israel; Benjamin
M. Ocko of Brookhaven National
Laboratory; and Mati Meron and Binhua Lin of
The University of Chicago.
This work was supported by the Department of Energy, through the Office
of Science Office of Basic
Energy Sciences, and by the U.S.-Israel
Binational Science Foundation, Jerusalem. Measurements at Brookhaven were also supported
by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences.
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the world's brightest scientists and engineers together to find exciting and
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the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Eva Sylwester (630/252-5549 or esylwester@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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