3 research outputs found
Temperature-dependent 2D-3D growth transition of ultra-thin Pt films deposited by PLD
During the growth of metal thin films on dielectric substrates at a given
deposition temperature T, the film's morphology is conditioned by the magnitude
and asymmetry of up- and downhill diffusion. Any severe change of this
mechanism leads to a growth instability, which induces an alteration of the
thin film morphology. In order to study this mechanism, ultra-thin Pt films
were deposited via pulsed laser deposition (PLD) onto
yttria-stabilized-zirconia single crystals at different deposition
temperatures. The morphological evolution of Pt thin films has been
investigated by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force
microscopy (AFM) and standard image analysis techniques. The experimentally
obtained morphologies are compared to simulated thin film structures resulting
from a two-dimensional kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) approach. Two main
observations have been made: i) Thin Pt films deposited onto zirconia undergo a
growth transition from two-dimensional to three-dimensional growth at T > 573
K. The growth transition and related morphological changes are a function of
the deposition temperature. ii) A critical cluster size of i\ast = 4 in
combination with an asymmetric Ehrlich-Schwoebel (ES) barrier favoring the
uphill diffusion of atoms allows for a computational reproduction of the
experimentally obtained film morphologies.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl