Colloquium: Electronic instabilities in self-assembled atom wires
Abstract
Many quasi-one-dimensional (1D) materials are experimental approximations to the textbook models of Peierls instabilities and collective excitations in 1D electronic systems. The recently observed self-assembly of atom wires on solid surfaces has provided fascinating new insights into the nature of their structural and electronic instabilities, from both real-space and momentum-space perspectives. In this Colloquium, three of the most studied atom wire arrays are highlighted, all featuring multiple surface-state bands. One of these is made of indium atoms on a flat silicon (111) surface, while the two others consist of gold atoms on surfaces that are vicinal to Si(111). The experimental and theoretical results are discussed with a focus on the detailed mechanisms of the observed phase transitions and on the role of microscopic defects.
- Publication:
-
Reviews of Modern Physics
- Pub Date:
- January 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1103/RevModPhys.82.307
- Bibcode:
- 2010RvMP...82..307S
- Keywords:
-
- 71.30.+h;
- 71.45.Lr;
- 73.20.-r;
- 73.22.Gk;
- Metal-insulator transitions and other electronic transitions;
- Charge-density-wave systems;
- Electron states at surfaces and interfaces;
- Broken symmetry phases