Abstract
AES, ELS, LEED and XPS investigations of the surface segregation of tin dissolved in a Fe-4wt%Sn alloy were performed in ultra-high vacuum at elevated temperatures. The three low indexed surface orientations (100), (110) and (111) were studied. In all cases, no dependence of the maximum tin surface coverage on temperature was detected within the temperature range from 450 to 650°C. An order-disorder transition was observed by LEED, AES and XPS for the (100) oriented surface during tin segregation. The binding state for the segregated tin atoms abruptly changes at the order-disorder transition as determined by XPS. Similar results were obtained for the (111) surface. A deviating behaviour was observed for the (110) surface orientation, where two different ordered hexagonal surface structures were detected by LEED during tin surface enrichment. The first structure is similar to the diamond structure of pure tin, and the second one corresponds to the formation of a thin layer of the intermetallic compound FeSn on the (110) surface. The electron binding energies of the segregated tin atoms determined by XPS increase with increasing tin coverage on the (110) oriented surface. ELS studies on (100) and (111) oriented surfaces saturated with segregated tin show in comparison with literature data of pure tin a surface plasmon loss peak but no signal for the corresponding bulk loss. An energy loss signal found only for the (110) surface at Sn saturation coverage seems to be characteristic of an intermetallic FeSn surface phase.
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