Morphology of Thin Film Growth,
Abstract
Thin films prepared by vapor deposition methods have a range of applications which demand control over the microstructural, electronic, and/or optical properties. Empirical classification schemes for the morphology of vapor-deposited thin films have been developed over the years in attempts to provide physical insights into the relationships between preparation parameters and resulting film properties. A variety of computational techniques have also been applied to model film growth and to elucidate, the physical principles that account for the observed morphological development. These include continuum, molecular dynamics, Monte Carlo, and ballistic aggregation techniques. In continuum models of film growth, many authors have studied the stability of one-dimensional surface profiles in response to sinusoidal perturbations of wavelength, lambda r. Effects of finite atomic size and shadowing by asperities have been proposed to enhance the perturbations, whereas adatom surface diffusion damps them. A smooth profile can be regained for lambda r < lambda o, where lambda o is the adatom diffusion length. When lambda r > lambda o, a modulated profile develops that appears analogous to experimentally-observable columnar morphology. In the experimental situation, clustering associated with initial nucleation is the dominant surface perturbation for thin film deposition on dissimilar substrates. It is technologically important to determine and control the evolution of surface morphology with subsequent film growth. Of direct importance here is the ability to fabricate multilayered structures with smooth interfaces.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 05, 1992
- Accession Number
- ADP008047
Entities
People
- R.w. Collins
Organizations
- Pennsylvania State University