Nonresonant formation of H− near unreconstructed Si(100) surfaces
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Abstract
We calculate ab initio the fraction of outgoing negative hydrogen ions that are normally incident on an unreconstructed Si(100) surface with kinetic energies between 50 and 150eV. The ground-state electronic structure of the surface is derived from a self-consistent screened Thomas–Fermi–von Weizsäcker pseudopotential including Wang-Teter shell structure corrections. Orbitals and energies of the electronic states in this potential are obtained by solving Kohn-Sham equations. The dynamics of the transfer of a single electron during the ion-surface collision is represented within the Newns-Anderson model, including image-charge interactions and electron translation factor. We show that the outgoing H− fraction evolves at large distances from the surface due to nonresonant transitions from the valence band levels of the substrate into the affinity level of H−. In particular, we show that electron capture from dangling-bond surface-state resonances determines the final negative-ion fraction. We find good qualitative agreement with the experimental results of Maazouz et al. [Surf. Sci. 398, 49 (1998)] for the scattering of hydrogen atoms and ions on silicon surfaces, even though our calculations do not include the effects of reconstruction and projectile motion parallel to the surface.