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Novel method for realistically simulating the deposition of thin films from the gas phase and its application to study the growth of thin gold film on crystalline silicon

Novel method for realistically simulating the deposition of thin films from the gas phase and its application to study the growth of thin gold film on crystalline silicon
Novel method for realistically simulating the deposition of thin films from the gas phase and its application to study the growth of thin gold film on crystalline silicon

We present a novel approach for simulating thin film (TF) deposition from the gas phase at the atomistic scale, combining molecular dynamics (MD) and time-stamped force-bias Monte Carlo (tfMC). In this approach, MD, with its fine temporal resolution, captures fast events, such as incident atom-substrate collisions, while tfMC simulates slow relaxation processes, enhancing temporal scale coverage. The proposed approach also adequately models deposition conditions, for example, by accounting for realistic energy and angle distributions in the description of the incident flux. To demonstrate its efficacy, we apply it to simulate the physical vapor deposition of a 3 nm Au TF on crystalline Si. We find that the entire deposition process consisted of four distinct stages: (i) the initial degradation of the Si substrate, (ii) formation of a mixed Au-Si interface layer, (iii) nucleation and growth of a polycrystalline Au layer, proceeding in a fashion close to the Frank-van der Merwe mode (layer-by-layer growth), and (iv) postdeposition relaxation of microstructure. The produced TF was comprehensively characterized, revealing that the deposited polycrystalline Au layer contained a considerable number of defects, including dislocations, stacking faults, grain boundaries, and Si impurities. The analysis also showed that in the simulated high-energy deposition the Si substrate was considerably degraded and that the disordered Au-Si layer which formed at the interface resembled the melt-quenched Au82Si18 eutectic. A comparison with an analogous MD simulation revealed that the MD + tfMC approach extended the accessible time scale 5-fold, allowing us to reach the microsecond scale, and yielding a TF with higher crystallinity and better-developed microstructure. The deposition rate used in the MD + tfMC simulation was two to 3 orders of magnitude lower than in other recent, but purely MD, simulations, being significantly closer to experiment.

1549-9618
4792-4814
Winczewski, Szymon
4c989463-5a91-42fa-99d8-e2aa2faddd46
Dziedzic, Jacek
8e2fdb55-dade-4ae4-bf1f-a148a89e4383
Łapiński, Marcin
18920f4f-9123-4555-ab96-88de0c4289e9
Rybicki, Jarosław
07e37045-a3a7-4b76-b2b7-61118a3b92e2
Winczewski, Szymon
4c989463-5a91-42fa-99d8-e2aa2faddd46
Dziedzic, Jacek
8e2fdb55-dade-4ae4-bf1f-a148a89e4383
Łapiński, Marcin
18920f4f-9123-4555-ab96-88de0c4289e9
Rybicki, Jarosław
07e37045-a3a7-4b76-b2b7-61118a3b92e2

Winczewski, Szymon, Dziedzic, Jacek, Łapiński, Marcin and Rybicki, Jarosław (2025) Novel method for realistically simulating the deposition of thin films from the gas phase and its application to study the growth of thin gold film on crystalline silicon. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 21 (9), 4792-4814. (doi:10.1021/acs.jctc.5c00319).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We present a novel approach for simulating thin film (TF) deposition from the gas phase at the atomistic scale, combining molecular dynamics (MD) and time-stamped force-bias Monte Carlo (tfMC). In this approach, MD, with its fine temporal resolution, captures fast events, such as incident atom-substrate collisions, while tfMC simulates slow relaxation processes, enhancing temporal scale coverage. The proposed approach also adequately models deposition conditions, for example, by accounting for realistic energy and angle distributions in the description of the incident flux. To demonstrate its efficacy, we apply it to simulate the physical vapor deposition of a 3 nm Au TF on crystalline Si. We find that the entire deposition process consisted of four distinct stages: (i) the initial degradation of the Si substrate, (ii) formation of a mixed Au-Si interface layer, (iii) nucleation and growth of a polycrystalline Au layer, proceeding in a fashion close to the Frank-van der Merwe mode (layer-by-layer growth), and (iv) postdeposition relaxation of microstructure. The produced TF was comprehensively characterized, revealing that the deposited polycrystalline Au layer contained a considerable number of defects, including dislocations, stacking faults, grain boundaries, and Si impurities. The analysis also showed that in the simulated high-energy deposition the Si substrate was considerably degraded and that the disordered Au-Si layer which formed at the interface resembled the melt-quenched Au82Si18 eutectic. A comparison with an analogous MD simulation revealed that the MD + tfMC approach extended the accessible time scale 5-fold, allowing us to reach the microsecond scale, and yielding a TF with higher crystallinity and better-developed microstructure. The deposition rate used in the MD + tfMC simulation was two to 3 orders of magnitude lower than in other recent, but purely MD, simulations, being significantly closer to experiment.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 April 2025
Published date: 13 May 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502440
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502440
ISSN: 1549-9618
PURE UUID: d618ef9a-4f11-4342-9f69-d907891212a8
ORCID for Jacek Dziedzic: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4786-372X

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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2025 16:51
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:02

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Contributors

Author: Szymon Winczewski
Author: Jacek Dziedzic ORCID iD
Author: Marcin Łapiński
Author: Jarosław Rybicki

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