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Electronic Band Structure of Ultimately Thin Silicon Oxide on Ru(0001)

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-03-27, 00:00 authored by Geoffroy Kremer, Juan Camilo Alvarez Quiceno, Simone Lisi, Thomas Pierron, César González, Muriel Sicot, Bertrand Kierren, Daniel Malterre, Julien E. Rault, Patrick Le Fèvre, François Bertran, Yannick J. Dappe, Johann Coraux, Pascal Pochet, Yannick Fagot-Revurat
Silicon oxide can be formed in a crystalline form, when prepared on a metallic substrate. It is a candidate support catalyst and possibly the ultimately thin version of a dielectric host material for two-dimensional materials and heterostructures. We determine the atomic structure and chemical bonding of the ultimately thin version of the oxide, epitaxially grown on Ru(0001). In particular, we establish the existence of two sublattices defined by metal–oxygen–silicon bridges involving inequivalent substrate sites. We further discover four electronic bands below the Fermi level, at high binding energy, two of them having a linear dispersion at their crossing K point (Dirac cones) and two others forming semiflat bands. While the latter two correspond to hybridized states between the oxide and the metal, the former relate to the topmost silicon–oxygen plane, which is not directly coupled to the substrate. Our analysis is based on high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, and density functional theory calculations.

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