Using in situ ultrahigh vacuum reflection electron microscopy, we have studied structural transitions on the Si (1 1 1) surface induced by Sn deposition up to 2 ML coverage (1 ML = 7.8 center dot 10(14) cm(-2)) and by Sn desorption at substrate temperatures T = 200-860 degrees C. We have shown that Si-Sn intermixing in the adsorption layer during Sn deposition onto the Si(1 1 1)-(7 x 7) surface at T > 650 degrees C leads to the shift of the monatomic steps in the step-up direction, and there is formed a mosaic (root 3x root 3)-Sn phase. The electromigration of Sn adatoms induced by DC resistive heating has been shown to redistribute adsorbed Sn layer and to cause local (root 3x root 3)-Sn double left right arrow "1 x 1"-Sn structural transitions on the surface. We have estimated the lower bound of the Sn adatom positive effective charge on the Si(1 1 1) surface q(eff)(Sn) >= 0.001 center dot e. During AC annealing, the rate of desorption-induced "1 x 1"-Sn domain area shrinkage has been measured as a function of substrate temperature, and the activation energy of Sn adatom desorption has been estimated to be 2.5 +/- 0.1 eV.