127 research outputs found
Regimes of Precursor-Mediated Epitaxial Growth
A discussion of epitaxial growth is presented for those situations (OMVPE,
CBE, ALE, MOMBE, GSMBE, etc.) when the kinetics of surface processes associated
with molecular precursors may be rate limiting. Emphasis is placed on the
identification of various {\it characteristic length scales} associated with
the surface processes. Study of the relative magnitudes of these lengths
permits one to identify regimes of qualitatively different growth kinetics as a
function of temperature and deposition flux. The approach is illustrated with a
simple model which takes account of deposition, diffusion, desorption,
dissociation, and step incorporation of a single precursor species, as well as
the usual processes of atomic diffusion and step incorporation. Experimental
implications are discussed in some detail.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
X-ray absorption spectra at the Ca-L-edge calculated within multi-channel multiple scattering theory
We report a new theoretical method for X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) in
condensed matter which is based on the multi-channel multiple scattering theory
of Natoli et al. and the eigen-channel R-matrix method. While the highly
flexible real-space multiple scattering (RSMS) method guarantees a precise
description of the single-electron part of the problem, multiplet-like electron
correlation effects between the photo-electron and localized electrons can be
taken account for in a configuration interaction scheme. For the case where
correlation effects are limited to the absorber atom, a technique for the
solution of the equations is devised, which requires only little more
computation time than the normal RSMS method for XAS. The new method is
described and an application to XAS at the Ca -edge in bulk Ca, CaO
and CaF is presented.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Noise-assisted Mound Coarsening in Epitaxial Growth
We propose deposition noise to be an important factor in unstable epitaxial
growth of thin films. Our analysis yields a geometrical relation H=(RWL)^2
between the typical mound height W, mound size L, and the film thickness H.
Simulations of realistic systems show that the parameter R is a characteristic
of the growth conditions, and generally lies in the range 0.2-0.7. The
constancy of R in late-stage coarsening yields a scaling relation between the
coarsening exponent 1/z and the mound height exponent \beta which, in the case
of saturated mound slope, gives \beta = 1/z = 1/4.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex Macros, 3 eps figure
Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations inspired by epitaxial graphene growth
Graphene, a flat monolayer of carbon atoms packed tightly into a two
dimensional hexagonal lattice, has unusual electronic properties which have
many promising nanoelectronic applications. Recent Low Energy Electron
Microscopy (LEEM) experiments show that the step edge velocity of epitaxially
grown 2D graphene islands on Ru(0001) varies with the fifth power of the
supersaturation of carbon adatoms. This suggests that graphene islands grow by
the addition of clusters of five atoms rather than by the usual mechanism of
single adatom attachment.
We have carried out Kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulations in order to further
investigate the general scenario of epitaxial growth by the attachment of
mobile clusters of atoms. We did not seek to directly replicate the Gr/Ru(0001)
system but instead considered a model involving mobile tetramers of atoms on a
square lattice. Our results show that the energy barrier for tetramer break up
and the number of tetramers that must collide in order to nucleate an immobile
island are the important parameters for determining whether, as in the
Gr/Ru(0001) system, the adatom density at the onset of island nucleation is an
increasing function of temperature. A relatively large energy barrier for
adatom attachment to islands is required in order for our model to produce an
equilibrium adatom density that is a large fraction of the nucleation density.
A large energy barrier for tetramer attachment to islands is also needed for
the island density to dramatically decrease with increasing temperature. We
show that islands grow with a velocity that varies with the fourth power of the
supersaturation of adatoms when tetramer attachment is the dominant process for
island growth
Phase-field-crystal modeling of the (2x1)-(1x1) phase-transitions of Si(001) and Ge(001) surfaces
We propose a two-dimensional phase-field-crystal model for the
(21)-(11) phase transitions of Si(001) and Ge(001) surfaces.
The dimerization in the 21 phase is described with a
phase-field-crystal variable which is determined by solving an evolution
equation derived from the free energy. Simulated periodic arrays of
dimerization variable is consistent with scanning-tunnelling-microscopy images
of the two dimerized surfaces. Calculated temperature dependence of the
dimerization parameter indicates that normal dimers and broken ones coexist
between the temperatures describing the charactristic temperature width of the
phase-transition, and , and a first-order phase transition takes
place at a temperature between them. The dimerization over the whole
temperature is determined. These results are in agreement with experiment. This
phase-field-crystal approach is applicable to phase-transitions of other
reconstructed surface phases, especially semiconductor 1 reconstructed
surface phases.Comment: 10 pages with 4 figures include
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