Abstract

The Si(553) surface, covered with half a monolayer of gold, forms a double strand of well-ordered atomic Au chains in each miniterrace. It represents one of the smallest possible realizations of quasi-one-dimensional (1D) systems. In this prototype system, by combining DC conductance and low-energy electron diffraction measurements with density functional calculations and ab initio Monte Carlo simulations, we demonstrate that nonlocal electronic correlations, together with thermal excitations, lead to peculiar phase transitions without long-range order. They are characterized by marginal (average) geometric relaxations, but with huge variations of the electronic band structure and concomitant strong temperature-dependent modifications of the density of states close to the Fermi level. Similar phenomena are expected in the large class of quasi-1D conductors and open a wide range of possibilities for their controlled manipulation. It is the increasing hybridization between spin-polarized Au and Si edge states that makes the Si dangling bond states at the step edge conducting, first as a transient between two insulating phases and finally opening a permanent new 1D conduction channel at high temperatures.

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