Mechanics of compressive stress evolution during thin film growth

2003 ◽  
Vol 51 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 2127-2148 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.R. Guduru ◽  
E. Chason ◽  
L.B. Freund
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 184798041877842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murat Al ◽  
Edmund B Webb

Evolution of deformation and stress in growing thin films has been studied in this work using computational simulations that resolve matter at atomic length and time scales. For the surface layers of films laying on the substrate of a dissimilar material, the stress distribution analysis around defects becomes more challenging. Herein, spatial and temporal distribution of deformation and associated stress evolution are presented for different thin film formation events including (1) sub-monolayer growth during an early film nucleation stage and (2) coalescence of adjacent monolayer “islands.” Validity of the stress computed via local computations of the virial expression for stress in a system of interacting particles was checked by comparing to results obtained from considerations of local atomic deformation in conjunction with existing expressions for epitaxial thin film growth stress. For the geometries studied here, where a monolayer of film with a highly characterized linear defect, as in the case of a stacking fault, was simulated for coalescence, fairly good agreement was found. This result demonstrates that, for similar defects at the surface layer, with sufficient sub-ensemble averaging of the standard virial expression for stress, semiquantitative spatial stress distribution information can be obtained from atomic scale simulations. Using our validated stress computation method, we reveal significant stress localization during thin film growth processes, leading to pronounced differences in maximum and minimum stress observed over very small spatial extent (of order multiple GPa over 3–6 nm distances). One prominent mechanism of stress localization revealed here is coalescence between adjacent growing islands. For geometries explored here, stress manifesting during coalescence is highly localized.


2009 ◽  
Vol 01 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
TANMAY K. BHANDAKKAR ◽  
ERIC CHASON ◽  
HUAJIAN GAO

We consider the effects of inhomogeneous grain boundary (GB) diffusivity on the formation of crack-like grain boundary diffusion wedges and evolution of compressive stress during the growth of a polycrystalline thin film on a substrate with a perfectly bonded film-substrate interface. The problem is formulated as a class of moving boundary diffusion problems with fully coupled elasticity, GB diffusion and film growth. The inhomogeneous GB mobility leads to a set of hypersingular integro-differential equations which are solved by a special numerical scheme. During the film growth, atoms diffuse into the GBs due to the tensile coalescence stress in the film associated with GB formation. We show that, at deposition rates comparable to the diffusion time scale, such GB diffusion leads to temporal decay of GB traction and induces crack-like singular stress concentration at the roots of the GBs. For a slowly growing high mobility thin film, the stress intensity factor near the tip of the diffusion wedge is comparable to that of a GB diffusion wedge under annealing conditions and can lead to nucleation of dislocations, which in turn can influence stress evolution during film growth. Furthermore, the higher chemical potential at the film surface can overdrive adatoms into GBs and result in a final compressive stress in the film. Our simulations on cyclic film deposition and growth interruption processes qualitatively reproduced the experimentally observed behavior of GB mobility on the Stress-Thickness evolution during deposition, the stress relaxation during growth interruption, as well as the dependence of steady state stress on the deposition rate.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (10) ◽  
pp. 102402
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Shishido ◽  
Akira Okumura ◽  
Tatsuya Saimyoji ◽  
Shota Nakamura ◽  
Shigeo Ohara ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Ashurbekova ◽  
Karina Ashurbekova ◽  
Iva Saric ◽  
Evgeny Modin ◽  
Mladen Petravic ◽  
...  

We developed a thin film growth with a radical-initiated cross-linking of vinyl groups in a layer-by-layer manner via molecular layer deposition (MLD). The cross-linked film exhibited improved properties like 12% higher density and enhanced stability compared to the non-cross-linked film.


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