RESUMEN
The geometric structure of MgO deposited on Fe(001) in ultrahigh vacuum by electron evaporation was determined in detail by using surface x-ray diffraction. In contrast to the common belief that MgO grows in direct contact on the Fe(001) substrate, we find an FeO interface layer between the substrate and the growing MgO structure which has not been considered thus far. This result opens new perspectives for the understanding of the Fe/MgO/Fe(001) interface and the tunneling magnetoresistance effect in general.
RESUMEN
We have performed a grazing incidence x-ray diffraction study of the self-organized N/Cu(001) system. Diffraction satellites associated with self-organization are particularly intense around Bragg conditions of the bulk crystal. Bulk elastic relaxations due to surface stress discontinuities at domain boundaries are responsible for this feature. A quantitative analysis shows that these relaxations, computed by molecular dynamics or continuum elasticity, explain very well the whole diffraction study. A difference in surface stress of 7 N m(-1) between uncovered and N-covered regions of the Cu surface is shown to be the driving force for self-organization.