Topography of the graphene/Ir(111) moir\'e studied by surface x-ray diffraction
Abstract
The structure of a graphene monolayer on Ir(111) has been investigated in situ in the growth chamber by surface x-ray diffraction including the specular rod, which allows disentangling the effect of the sample roughness from that of the nanorippling of graphene and iridium along the moir\'e-like pattern between graphene and Ir(111). Accordingly we are able to provide precise estimates of the undulation associated with this nanorippling, which is small in this weakly interacting graphene/metal system and thus proved difficult to assess in the past. The nanoripplings of graphene and iridium are found in phase, i.e. the in-plane position of their height maxima coincide, but the amplitude of the height modulation is much larger for graphene (\(0.379 0.044\) ) than, e.g., for the topmost Ir layer (\(0.017 0.002\) ). The average graphene-Ir distance is found to be \(3.38 0.04\) .
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.