Imaging empty states on the Ge(100) surface at 12 K
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
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Our understanding of bias-dependent scanning-tunneling-microscopy (STM) images is complicated not only by the multiplicity of the surface electronic structure, but also the manifold tunneling effects in probing semiconductor surfaces having directional dangling- and covalent-bond orbitals. Here we present a refined interpretation of empty-state STM images from the model semiconductor surface, Ge(100), on the basis of measurements at low temperature (12 K) combined with density-functional-theory calculations. In the lower-bias regime (<= 1.6 V), the electron tunneling is found to occur predominantly in antibonding dangling-bond or/and dimer-bond states (pi*(1)pi*(2) and sigma*) of Ge(100) at the surface-parallel wave vector k(parallel to) = 0, leading to the tunneling current maxima located directly on the dimer rows. At higher biases (e.g., at 2 V), the current maxima are shifted to the position in the troughs between the dimer rows, because the tunneling occurs efficiently in the pi*(2) states at k(parallel to )not equal 0 associated with the dimer-up atoms of two adjacent dimer rows, i.e., because of increased sideways tunneling. Thus, the empty-state STM images of Ge(100), albeit strongly bias-dependent, reflect the dimer arrangement rather than the backbonds and surface resonances at all experimental conditions used. The results are also discussed in comparison with the counterpart system of Si(100).