Abstract

The growth of Fe ultrathin films on Ni(111) at room temperature has been investigated by low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy. In the initial deposition, a pseudomorphic fcc-Fe(111) monolayer with triangular line defects grows on the Ni substrate. Triangular lines consist of atomic-size dark spots located in the Ni atom sites and are interpreted in terms of the misfit-induced atomic vacancies in the Ni substrate. With further deposition, the second monolayer Fe film, which consists of three elongated domains of a striped structure, grows on the first monolayer fcc-Fe film. The striped structure results from the growth of a distorted bcc-Fe(110) phase with one-dimensional Nishiyama-Wassermann orientation. Further deposition leads to the growth of thicker bcc (110) films on the distorted bcc(110) domains, forming three-dimensional ridgelike islands. The first and second monolayer Fe films grow in an incomplete layer-by-layer growth mode and the thicker Fe films grow in a three-dimensional island growth mode.

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