Al deposition on Fe: Formation of an iron aluminide surface alloy

1994 
An investigation has been made of the formation of a surface iron‐aluminum alloy through aluminum adsorption (and subsequent reaction) on Fe(100) single‐crystal and polycrystalline Fe surfaces. On the Fe(100) surface, Auger electron spectroscopy and low‐energy ion scattering spectroscopy (LEISS) studies indicate that at low Al coverages (<1 ML), and a very low Al deposition rate (<0.03 ML/min), a surface alloy grows uniformly at 25 °C to yield an aluminide with an approximate average stoichiometry of FeAl3. At higher Al exposures the surface becomes more aluminum rich. This Al enrichment is due to a kinetic limitation in the formation of the surface alloy. Heating the surface (300 °C during or after Al deposition) partially overcomes this kinetic limitation, and the topmost surface layer changes to a stable stoichiometry with some reduction in the relative aluminum concentration. Low‐energy electron diffraction observations made during the Al deposition (or subsequent heating experiments) gave no indicati...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []