Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
As is clear from the previous chapters, a considerable amount of information has become available about the diffusivity of metal atoms on metal surfaces. This knowledge will have an impact on understanding topics such as crystal growth and dissolution, annealing, sintering, as well as chemical surface reactions. We will not examine any of these important topics, but will instead focus on attempts to measure atomic surface interactions, as an example of effects which have become much clearer through gains in the knowledge of surface diffusion.
Interactions can be divided into two categories, direct, for example van der Waals, dipolar, as well as electronic interactions, and indirect, which are mediated by the substrate, such as coupling by electronic states, elastic effects, or vibrational coupling. In Chapters 8 and 9 we described the movement of clusters created mostly by direct interactions of adatoms. In this chapter we will concentrate on the second type of interactions, mediated by the lattice – indirect interactions. The theory of interactions between adsorbed atoms has been nicely reviewed by Einstein, so here we just want to point out that with two atoms in the gas phase, the wave function for a higher state will be confined to the vicinity of the core. Placed on a metal surface, however, quantum interference of wave functions enters and adatom waves combine with metal wave functions from the lattice. The contributions from two atoms may overlap, as shown in Fig. 10.1.
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