Modeling of Interface and Internal Disorder Applied to XRD Analysis of Ag-Based Nano-Multilayers.
Daniel AriosaClaudia CancellieriVicente Araullo-PetersMirco ChiodiElizaveta KlyatskinaJolanta Janczak-RuschLars P H JeurgensPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Multilayered structures are a promising route to tailor electronic, magnetic, optical, and/or mechanical properties and durability of functional materials. Sputter deposition at room temperature, being an out-of-equilibrium process, introduces structural defects and confers to these nanosystems an intrinsic thermodynamical instability. As-deposited materials exhibit a large amount of internal atomic displacements within each constituent block as well as severe interface roughness between different layers. To access and characterize the internal multilayer disorder and its thermal evolution, X-ray diffraction investigation and analysis are performed systematically at differently grown Ag-Ge/aluminum nitride (AlN) multilayers (co-deposited, sequentially deposited with and without radio frequency (RF) bias) samples and after high-temperature annealing treatment. We report here on model calculations based on a kinematic formalism describing the displacement disorder both within the multilayer blocks and at the interfaces to reproduce the experimental X-ray diffraction intensities. Mixing and displacements at the interface are found to be considerably reduced after thermal treatment for co- and sequentially deposited Ag-Ge/AlN samples. The application of a RF bias during the deposition causes the highest interface mixing and introduces random intercalates in the AlN layers. X-ray analysis is contrasted to transmission electron microscopy pictures to validate the approach.
Keyphrases
- electron microscopy
- high resolution
- room temperature
- quantum dots
- high temperature
- molecular dynamics
- highly efficient
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dual energy
- molecular dynamics simulations
- visible light
- computed tomography
- early onset
- ionic liquid
- replacement therapy
- gold nanoparticles
- data analysis
- liquid chromatography