A New X-Ray Diffraction Method for Thin Film Thickness Estimation

1982 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. K95-K98 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Hejdová ◽  
M. Čermák
1990 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 308-311
Author(s):  
Li Chaorong ◽  
Mai Zhenhong ◽  
Cui Shufan ◽  
Zhou Junming ◽  
Yutian Wang

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 27-32
Author(s):  
Suroor H. Taha ◽  
◽  
Thamir A. Jumah ◽  

Zirconium dioxide was prepared as a thin film by using pulse laser deposition (PLD).Subsequently, the films had been thermally treated by annealing process at temperature 450 oC. The structural and electrical parameters of thin films were investigated. As-deposited films were amorphous and had a large surface density of ablated particles. The Annealing process resulted change the phase from amorphous to polycrystalline. The X-ray diffraction of all these films has a polycrystalline structure with two different phases named tetragonal and monoclinic. Hall measurements indicate that the charge carriers of all these films were p-type. In addition, the Hall coefficient suffers some change with thin film thickness. The AC results measured showed the films have resistance and capacitance properties. The AC conduction is dominated by hole cattier.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 149
Author(s):  
Baha'a A. Al-Hilli

The objective of this study is to assess the influence of nano-particle Fe2O3 thin film thickness on some physical properties which were prepared by magnetron DC- sputtering on glass substrate at room temperature. The structure was tested with X-Ray diffraction and it was to be amorphous and to become single crystal with recognized peak in (003) after annealing at temperature 500oC. The physical properties as a function of deposition parameters and then film thickness were studied. The optical properties such as absorbance, energy gap and some optical constants are measured and found that of about (3eV) energy gap.


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Cancellieri ◽  
Daniel Ariosa ◽  
Aleksandr V. Druzhinin ◽  
Yeliz Unutulmazsoy ◽  
Antonia Neels ◽  
...  

Thin films generally contain depth-dependent residual stress gradients, which influence their functional properties and stability in harsh environments. An understanding of these stress gradients and their influence is crucial for many applications. Standard methods for thin-film stress determination only provide average strain values, thus disregarding possible variation in strain/stress across the film thickness. This work introduces a new method to derive depth-dependent strain profiles in thin films with thicknesses in the submicrometre range by laboratory-based in-plane grazing X-ray diffraction, as applied to magnetron-sputtering-grown polycrystalline Cu thin films with different thicknesses. By performing in-plane grazing diffraction analysis at different incidence angles, the in-plane lattice constant depth profile of the thin film can be resolved through a dedicated robust data processing procedure. Owing to the underlying intrinsic difficulties related to the inverse Laplace transform of discrete experimental data sets, four complementary procedures are presented to reliably extract the strain depth profile of the films from the diffraction data. Surprisingly, the strain depth profile is not monotonic and possesses a complex shape: highly compressive close to the substrate interface, more tensile within the film and relaxed close to the film surface. The same strain profile is obtained by the four different data evaluation methods, confirming the validity of the derived depth-dependent strain profiles as a function of the film thickness. Comparison of the obtained results with the average in-plane stresses independently derived by the standard stress analysis method in the out-of-plane diffraction geometry validates the solidity of the proposed method.


Author(s):  
Choon Meng Kiew ◽  
A. Tay ◽  
Weng Khuen Ho ◽  
Khiang Wee Lim ◽  
J.H. Lee

2007 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 43-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Tomov ◽  
S. Vassilev

Accounting for secondary extinction (SE) of the intensities measured from a textured film by means of conventional X-ray diffractometer, a new X-ray diffraction method is described for determination of film thickness. Physically, the problem is restricted to using a reflection pair corresponding to the main component of the texture. As model sample a vacuum-deposited silver thin film is used.


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