Order-disorder phase transition on the (100) surface of magnetite
Abstract
Using low-energy electron diffraction, we show that the room-temperature (2×2)R45 reconstruction of Fe3O4(100) reversibly disorders at 450 . Short-range order persists above the transition, suggesting that the transition is second order and Ising-like. We interpret the transition in terms of a model in which sub-surface Fe3+ is replaced by Fe2+ as the temperature is raised. This model reproduces the structure of antiphase boundaries previously observed with STM as well as the continuous nature of the transition. To account for the observed transition temperature, the energy cost of each charge rearrangement is 82 meV.
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