Abstract

When an ionic metal oxide crystal is cleaved, inhomogeneous electrical charging of the surface can be a result. Such an effect has been well documented in magnesium oxide (100). For example, recent rigorous AFM studies indicate that nanoscale charged clusters of MgO are created during cleavage, with high concentrations often located at terrace step edges (Barth and Henry in J. Phys. Chem. C 113:247, 2009). In addition, ablation processes of freshly cleaved magnesium oxide crystals may be effected by remnant surface charging and microstructures (Stoneham et al. in Appl. Phys. A 69:S81, 1999). We report here that such surface charging strongly impacts neutral atom desorption, even under conditions of extremely mild excitation of surface terrace features. In our experiments, single-crystal MgO (100) is cleaved in air and placed in an ultra-high vacuum chamber (UHV). We irradiate the crystal at 6.4 eV, photon energy resonant with five-coordinated (5-C) terrace sites and probe desorbing neutral oxygen atoms. It is found that a significant fraction of desorbed neutral oxygen atoms from the charged surface possess kinetic energies in excess of 0.7 eV. This is in contrast to uncharged samples (discharged in vacuo over 24 hours) that display a near-thermal oxygen atom distribution.

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