Abstract

The electronic and crystalline structures of thin epitaxial DyNi films grown in situ by codeposition of both constituents onto a W(110) substrate followed by annealing at $500\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}\mathrm{C}$ were studied by angle-resolved valence-band photoemission and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). The obtained experimental data are in good agreement with results of local-density-approximation calculations in bulk geometry. Further investigations included supercell calculations. According to the latter investigations the observed $(3\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}1)$ overstructure of the LEED pattern and a Dy $5d$-derived surface state near the Fermi energy are related to a reconstruction of the (001) surface of DyNi resulting from missing Ni rows in the topmost atomic layer. The d-like surface state is a well-known phenomenon for metallic Dy(0001). Similar to the situation in rare-earth metals, it may influence the surface magnetic properties of thin DyNi films.

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