scholarly journals Shapes and Atomic Arrangements of Pure Cu-Nanoparticles Grown in High Vacuum and in Non-stress Condition Observed by 3D-Tomography in a TEM

2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (S02) ◽  
pp. 616-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Oikawa ◽  
C Langlois ◽  
C Mottet ◽  
C Ricolleau

Extended abstract of a paper presented at Microscopy and Microanalysis 2006 in Chicago, Illinois, USA, July 30 – August 3, 2006

1998 ◽  
Vol 533 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. L. Rowell ◽  
R. L. Williams ◽  
G. C. Aers ◽  
H. Lafontaine ◽  
D. C. Houghton ◽  
...  

AbstractRecent low-temperature photoluminescence (PL) studies will be discussed for coherent Si1-xGex. and Si1-xGexCy alloy multiple quantum wells on Si (001) substrates grown by either ultra-high vacuum chemical vapour deposition or solid source molecular beam epitaxy. An in-plane applied-stress technique will be described which removes systematically band edge degeneracies revealing the lower, PL-active CB. Applied-stress data taken with this technique at ultra-low excitation intensity proved intrinsic type II CB alignment in SiGe on Si (001). Apparent type I alignment observed at higher intensity will also be discussed. New applied stress PL results are presented for Si1-x-yGexCy quantum wells under various grown-in stress condition


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 91-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcos Vinicius Puydinger dos Santos ◽  
Aleksandra Szkudlarek ◽  
Artur Rydosz ◽  
Carlos Guerra-Nuñez ◽  
Fanny Béron ◽  
...  

Non-noble metals, such as Cu and Co, as well as noble metals, such as Au, can be used in a number modern technological applications, which include advanced scanning-probe systems, magnetic memory and storage, ferroelectric tunnel junction memristors, metal interconnects for high performance integrated circuits in microelectronics and nano-optics applications, especially in the areas of plasmonics and metamaterials. Focused-electron-beam-induced deposition (FEBID) is a maskless direct-write tool capable of defining 3-dimensional metal deposits at nanometre scale for above applications. However, codeposition of organic ligands when using organometallic precursors is a typical problem that limits FEBID of pure metal nanostructures. In this work, we present a comparative study using a post-growth annealing protocol at 100, 200, and 300 °C under high vacuum on deposits obtained from Co2(CO)8, Cu(II)(hfac)2, and Me2Au(acac) to study improvements on composition and electrical conductivity. Although the as-deposited material was similar for all precursors, metal grains embedded in a carbonaceous matrix, the post-growth annealing results differed. Cu-containing deposits showed the formation of pure Cu nanocrystals at the outer surface of the initial deposit for temperatures above 100 °C, due to the migration of Cu atoms from the carbonaceous matrix containing carbon, oxygen, and fluorine atoms. The average size of the Cu crystals doubles between 100 and 300 °C of annealing temperature, while the composition remains constant. In contrast, for Co-containing deposits oxygen release was observed upon annealing, while the carbon content remained approximately constant; the cobalt atoms coalesced to form a metallic film. The as-deposited Au-containing material shows subnanometric grains that coalesce at 100 °C, maintaining the same average size at annealing temperatures up to 300 °C. Raman analysis suggests that the amorphous carbonaceous matrix of the as-written Co, Cu and Au deposits turned into nanocrystalline graphite with comparable crystal sizes of 12–14 nm at 300 °C annealing temperature. However, we observed a more effective formation of graphite clusters in Co- than in Cu- and Au-containing deposits. The graphitisation has a minor influence on the electrical conductivity improvements of Co–C deposits, which is attributed to the high as-deposited Co content and the related metal grain percolation. On the contrary, electrical conductivity improvements by factors of 30 and 12 for, respectively, Cu–C and Au–C deposits with low metal content are mainly attributed to the graphitisation. This relatively simple vacuum-based post-growth annealing protocol may be useful for other precursors as it proved to be efficient in reliably tuning the electrical properties of as-deposited FEBID materials. Finally, a H2-assisted gold purification protocol is demonstrated at temperatures around 300 °C by fully removing the carbon matrix and drastically reducing the electrical resistance of the deposit.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (07) ◽  
pp. 2050049 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhuangjun Wu ◽  
Maoxiang Li ◽  
Sen Tian ◽  
Linxing Zhang

Particle coalescence has wide applications in nature and industry. In this study, molecular dynamics (MDs) simulations were employed to examine the sintering of Cu and Au nanoparticles, as well as two other systems, namely, Cu nanoparticles and Au nanoparticles. The results suggested that, the Au atoms diffused through the outer area of the sintering neck before the nanoparticles were fused into one sphere. The possible reason was that the Au atoms resembled fluid, which could be ascribed to the local thermal energy at the contact area. Typically, the change in energy per atom from 300 K to the contact temperature denoted that less energy was required for the atoms in the pure Cu system to contact with each other than those in the other two systems.


2001 ◽  
Vol 673 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Weiss ◽  
H. Gao ◽  
E. Arzt

ABSTRACTThe mechanical properties of thin metal films have been investigated for many years. How- ever, the underlying mechanisms are still not fully understood. In this paper we give an overview of our work on thermomechanical properties and microstructure evolution in pure Cu and dilute Cu-Al alloy films. Very clean films were produced by sputtering and annealing under ultra-high vacuum (UHV) conditions. We described stress-temperature curves of pure Cu films with a constrained diffusional creep model from the literature. In Cu-1at.%Al alloy films, Al surface segregation and oxidation led to a “self-passivating” effect. These films showed an increased high- temperature strength because of the suppression of constrained diffusional creep; however, under certain annealing conditions, these films deteriorated due to void growth at grain boundaries.


Author(s):  
S. Basu ◽  
D. F. Parsons

We are approaching the invasiveness of cancer cells from the studies of their wet surface morphology which should distinguish them from their normal counterparts. In this report attempts have been made to provide physical basis and background work to a wet replication method with a differentially pumped hydration chamber (Fig. 1) (1,2), to apply this knowledge for obtaining replica of some specimens of known features (e.g. polystyrene latex) and finally to realize more specific problems and to improvize new methods and instrumentation for their rectification. In principle, the evaporant molecules penetrate through a pair of apertures (250, 350μ), through water vapors and is, then, deposited on the specimen. An intermediate chamber between the apertures is pumped independently of the high vacuum system. The size of the apertures is sufficiently small so that full saturated water vapor pressure is maintained near the specimen.


Author(s):  
George H. N. Riddle ◽  
Benjamin M. Siegel

A routine procedure for growing very thin graphite substrate films has been developed. The films are grown pyrolytically in an ultra-high vacuum chamber by exposing (111) epitaxial nickel films to carbon monoxide gas. The nickel serves as a catalyst for the disproportionation of CO through the reaction 2C0 → C + CO2. The nickel catalyst is prepared by evaporation onto artificial mica at 400°C and annealing for 1/2 hour at 600°C in vacuum. Exposure of the annealed nickel to 1 torr CO for 3 hours at 500°C results in the growth of very thin continuous graphite films. The graphite is stripped from its nickel substrate in acid and mounted on holey formvar support films for use as specimen substrates.The graphite films, self-supporting over formvar holes up to five microns in diameter, have been studied by bright and dark field electron microscopy, by electron diffraction, and have been shadowed to reveal their topography and thickness. The films consist of individual crystallites typically a micron across with their basal planes parallel to the surface but oriented in different, apparently random directions about the normal to the basal plane.


Author(s):  
R. H. Geiss ◽  
R. L. Ladd ◽  
K. R. Lawless

Detailed electron microscope and diffraction studies of the sub-oxides of vanadium have been reported by Cambini and co-workers, and an oxidation study, possibly complicated by carbon and/or nitrogen, has been published by Edington and Smallman. The results reported by these different authors are not in good agreement. For this study, high purity polycrystalline vanadium samples were electrochemically thinned in a dual jet polisher using a solution of 20% H2SO4, 80% CH3OH, and then oxidized in an ion-pumped ultra-high vacuum reactor system using spectroscopically pure oxygen. Samples were oxidized at 350°C and 100μ oxygen pressure for periods of 30,60,90 and 160 minutes. Since our primary interest is in the mechanism of the low pressure oxidation process, the oxidized samples were cooled rapidly and not homogenized. The specimens were then examined in the HVEM at voltages up to 500 kV, the higher voltages being necessary to examine thick sections for which the oxidation behavior was more characteristic of the bulk.


Author(s):  
Richard E. Hartman ◽  
Roberta S. Hartman ◽  
Peter L. Ramos

We have long felt that some form of electronic information retrieval would be more desirable than conventional photographic methods in a high vacuum electron microscope for various reasons. The most obvious of these is the fact that with electronic data retrieval the major source of gas load is removed from the instrument. An equally important reason is that if any subsequent analysis of the data is to be made, a continuous record on magnetic tape gives a much larger quantity of data and gives it in a form far more satisfactory for subsequent processing.


Author(s):  
A. V. Crewe

The high resolution STEM is now a fact of life. I think that we have, in the last few years, demonstrated that this instrument is capable of the same resolving power as a CEM but is sufficiently different in its imaging characteristics to offer some real advantages.It seems possible to prove in a quite general way that only a field emission source can give adequate intensity for the highest resolution^ and at the moment this means operating at ultra high vacuum levels. Our experience, however, is that neither the source nor the vacuum are difficult to manage and indeed are simpler than many other systems and substantially trouble-free.


Author(s):  
T. Mukai ◽  
T. E. Mitchell

Radiation-induced homogeneous precipitation in Ni-Be alloys was recently observed by high voltage electron microscopy. A coupling of interstitial flux with solute Be atoms is responsible for the precipitation. The present investigation further shows that precipitation is also induced at thin foil surfaces by electron irradiation under a high vacuum.


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