Abstract

Growth of gold condensed on the (110) plane of tungsten has been studied using LEED and AES. Three ordered surface structures were observed when condensation takes place at or above 700 K, and no detectable order is seen below this temperature. Structure 1 is developed as the coverage approaches one monolayer and has gold atoms held in the W(110) array with a resultant 2% reduction in gold atom diameter. The second gold layer adopts the Au(111) structure with Au[1 21] rotated by 2.5° from W[1 10] and the first gold layer may also be constrained to adopt this structure. Deposition of more gold produces three dimensional crystallites with Au(111)∥W(110) which are double-positioned with their 121 directions parallel to the 121 directions of tungsten. Addition of half a monolayer of oxygen before condensation, completely prevents formation of structures 1 and 2. Instead, at coverages of 3 or more monolayers, three dimensional crystallites develop with Au(111) ∥ W(110) and Au[1 21] ∥ W[1 10] . This behaviour is compared with the reported behaviour of copper and silver on W(110).

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