Affiliation:
1. Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey
Abstract
Abstract
A theory of low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) amplitudes is developed for a model in which the crystal surface is represented by a step-function termination of the bulk crystal potential ("bare-substrate" model). The crystal is considered to be centro-symmetric and it is assumed that either the crystal has a two-fold axis of rotation normal to the surface or the primay beam is normally incident on the surface. The origin of coordinates is taken to lie at a center of symmetry of the substrate crystal. The diffraction amplitude is considered as a function of complex electron energy. For a real potential it is shown to have the following properties:
1. The imaginary part of the amplitude vanishes at each branch point of the amplitude function;
2. There are certain segments of the real-energy axis, called "inactive" segments, throughout which the imaginary part of the amplitude vanishes approximately.
The theoretical results are illustrated by a numerical example. It is suggested that the diffraction amplitude can be represented by a simple expression that has the correct functional form and that satisfies the appropriate dispersion relation. One such expression is proposed and discussed in comparison with exact computational results.
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy,Mathematical Physics
Cited by
7 articles.
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