Filters
Results 1 - 1 of 1
Results 1 - 1 of 1.
Search took: 0.034 seconds
Tanovic, L.; Tanovic, N.; Carter, G.; Nobes, M.J.
Copenhagen Univ. (Denmark). H.C. Oersted Inst1993
Copenhagen Univ. (Denmark). H.C. Oersted Inst1993
AbstractAbstract
[en] (100), (110) and (111) oriented single crystal surfaces of Cu and Pb have been bombarded with inert gas ions, self ions, ions of the other substrate species and Bi in the energy range 50-150 keV and in the fluence range 1015-1018 ions.cm2. The evolving surface topography was observed by scanning electron microscopy. This topography was observed to be strongly influenced by ion species and surface orientation but the habit of the topography was delineated at low fluences and the features increased in size and density with increasing fluence with some mutation to the more stable of the features. As an example Bi and Pb bombardment of (100) Cu leads to little topographic evolution, (110) Cu develops a system of parallel ridges with (100) facets and (111) Cu develops a prismatic surface, each prism possessing (100) facets. These, and the more general, results cannot be explained by surface erosion by sputtering theory alone (this predicts surface stability of the lowest sputtering yield orientation (110), nor by surface free energy density minimisation criteria (this predicts stability of (111) surfaces). It is proposed that the observed topography is most strongly related to the crystallographic form of precipitates of implanted species. (orig.)
Primary Subject
Secondary Subject
Source
1993; 16 p; 15. international conference on atomic collisions in solids (ICALS-15); London (Canada); 26-30 Jul 1993; ISSN 0106-7222; 

Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue