Abstract

The deposition of germanium as well as the chemisorption of molecular oxygen cause the formation of depletion layers on cleave InP(110) surfaces initially exhibiting flat bands, and on p- as well as on n-type doped samples the Fermi level is finally pinned (1.11±0.02) eV above the valence-band top Evs. From the surface band bending vs Ge coverage curves the energies of the chemisorption-induced surface states, i.e., their effective occupation levels, were evaluated as Evs +1.08 eV for the surface donors and Evs +1.15 eV for the surface acceptors. Chemisorbed oxygen, in contrast to germanium, introduces no surface dipoles on InP(110) and is thus incorporated rather than adsorbed. Both the unstimulated and the photon-stimulated interactions of unexcited molecular oxygen with InP(110) surfaces result in a phosphorous loss. After exposures of 1013 L of oxygen in the dark and when simultaneously illuminated by the light of a xenon-arc lamp the phosphorous loss is equivalent to a depletion of one and 1.65 InP layers, respectively, while the oxygen uptake amounts to 0.6 and 1.35 monolayers, respectively. Thus, an indium-oxide layer forms on InP(110) which finding is in agreement with the nonexistent chemisorption dipoles.

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