Abstract

The study of the influence of phonon-mediated processes on grazing-incidence fast atom diffraction (GIFAD) patterns is relevant for the use of GIFAD as a surface analysis technique. In this work, we apply the Phonon-Surface Initial Value Representation (P-SIVR) approximation to investigate lattice vibration effects on GIFAD patterns for the He/LiF(001) system at room temperature. The main features introduced by thermal lattice vibrations in the angular distributions of the scattered helium atoms are analyzed by keeping a fixed impact energy and varying the incidence angle to consider normal energies in the 0.1–3 eV range. In all the cases, thermal fluctuations introduce a wide polar spread that transforms the interference maxima into elongated strips. We found that the log-normal polar widths of the specular and outermost maxima do not depend on the normal energy, as it was experimentally observed. In addition, when the normal energy increases, not only the relative intensities of interference peaks are affected by the crystal vibrations, but also the visibility of the interference structures, which disappear completely for normal energies approximately equal to 3 eV. These findings qualitatively agree with recent experimental data, but the simulated polar widths underestimate the experimentally-derived limit, suggesting that there are other mechanisms, such as inelastic processes involving the net exchange of phonons, that contribute to the polar dispersion of the GIFAD patterns.

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