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Hydrogen atom collisions with a semiconductor efficiently promote electrons to the conduction band

Physics

Hydrogen atom collisions with a semiconductor efficiently promote electrons to the conduction band

K. Krüger, Y. Wang, et al.

Explore the intriguing findings of a team including Kerstin Krüger and Yingqi Wang, as they investigate the Born–Oppenheimer approximation's validity through hydrogen atom scattering on a Ge(111)c(2×8) surface, revealing unexpected energy-loss distributions linked to electron promotion phenomena.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The Born–Oppenheimer approximation is the keystone of modern computational chemistry and there is wide interest in understanding under what conditions it remains valid. Hydrogen atom scattering from insulator, semi-metal and metal surfaces has helped provide such information. The approximation is adequate for insulators and for metals it fails, but not severely. Here we present hydrogen atom scattering from a semiconductor surface: Ge(111)c(2×8). Experiments show bimodal energy-loss distributions revealing two channels. Molecular dynamics trajectories within the Born–Oppenheimer approximation reproduce one channel quantitatively. The second channel transfers much more energy and is absent in simulations. It grows with hydrogen atom incidence energy and exhibits an energy-loss onset equal to the Ge surface bandgap. This leads us to conclude that hydrogen atom collisions at the surface of a semiconductor are capable of promoting electrons from the valence to the conduction band with high efficiency. Our current understanding fails to explain these observations.
Publisher
Nature Chemistry
Published On
Mar 01, 2023
Authors
Kerstin Krüger, Yingqi Wang, Sophia Tödter, Felix Debbeler, Anna Matveenko, Nils Hertl, Xueyao Zhou, Bin Jiang, Hua Guo, Alec M. Wodtke, Oliver Bünermann
Tags
Born–Oppenheimer approximation
hydrogen atom scattering
Ge(111)c(2×8) surface
energy-loss distributions
electron promotion
molecular dynamics simulations
semiconductor surface
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