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Researchers Reveal New Insights into the Surface of
Silicon Semiconductors
Smaller. Faster. Wildly complex."
This could easily be the motto for semiconductors-the
materials that, among lots of other advances in electronics,
allow cell phones to continuously shrink in size while
increasing the number of their mind-boggling functions.
While exceptionally tiny, semiconductors possess the
ability to enable a multitude of complex functions,
making them an invaluable ingredient in electronics
technology. But, while the computer age is in full bloom,
knowledge of semiconductor nanostructures is still relatively
young; and research seeking to answer essential and
sometimes-basic materials questions is occurring at
breakneck speed.

SRC's Scienta Energy Analyzer.
As part of this race to understand semiconductors
better, a team of researchers from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison has revealed valuable information
about Silicon and it's surface structure. In particular,
the researchers, who did much of their work at the Synchrotron
Radiation Center (SRC), examined the inimitable 7 x
7 surface structure of Si(111), the most stable surface
of silicon.
"Surfaces and interfaces dominate in today's silicon
devices, since the surface to volume ratio goes up in
small structures. These two-dimensional structures are
difficult to study, and the SRC work explores an aspect
that has remained unexplored on semiconductors so far,"
explains one of the researchers, Ingo Barke, who, along
with his collaborators at University of Wisconsin –
Madison.
"Our results reveal a very unusual surface band
structure, which can be best explained by a mechanism
called 'electron-phonon interaction,'" Barke continues.
"Phonons are vibrations of the atoms, which are
surrounded by electrons. By shaking the surface atoms
the orbiting electrons 'feel' these vibrations and change
their movement in a characteristic way. Our work connects
two intensively studied fields: electron-phonon interaction
which causes conventional superconductivity, and semiconductor
surfaces which are of great importance for electronic
devices and semiconductor technology."
While similar research has been done on metal surfaces,
the current study is the first example of such examination
on a semiconductor surface. Obviously, the researchers
realize that studying the microscopic surface of silicon
may seem rather esoteric. But, history has shown that
these interesting jumps in basic knowledge about materials
such as semiconductors can have significant practical
impacts down the roadâ€"and this is
particularly true in the case of silicon, which itself
has become so inextricably important in modern society
that it is credited with its own "silicon age."
"Electron-phonon interaction itself is of great
scientific and practical interest because it is the
key mechanism for conventional superconductivity,"
Barke notes while stressing that this knowledge may
lead to the possibility of producing 'designer superconductors.'
"The ultimate goal lies in the possibility of tailoring,"
concludes Barke.
Visit www.wisc.edu
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