Solid-state dewetting of co-sputtered thin Mo-Cu films accompanied by phase separation

FT Li and A Mostafa and J Zimmerman and Z Liang and J Yeom and J Janczak-Rusch and N Abdolrahim and E Rabkin, ACTA MATERIALIA, 289, 120889 (2025).

DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2025.120889

We employed magnetron co-sputtering to fabricate homogeneous Mo-Cu thin films on a heated sapphire substrate. Partial dewetting at 750-1000 degrees C led to the formation of Mo-Cu bicontinuous film and Cu particles. The Mo self-diffusion coefficient along the Mo-Cu interface at 750 degrees C was estimated at 1.8 x 10-14 m2/s from bicontinuous structure coarsening kinetics. After full dewetting at 900 degrees C for 12 h, isolated, closely spaced Mo nanoparticles and large Cu particles decorated with Mo nanoparticles were observed. Two orientation relationships between the Mo and Cu particles were identified, and the energies of the respective interfaces were estimated using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. Selective etching of Cu exposed numerous Mo nanoparticles beneath each large Cu particle, while Cu evaporation at 1000 degrees C revealed fewer but larger Mo nanoparticles, indicating coalescence of Mo nanoparticles during Cu evaporation. We developed a semi- quantitative kinetic model describing the migration of Mo nanoparticles at the edge of a large evaporating Cu particle in terms of Mo self-diffusion on the exposed Mo surface and along the Mo-Cu interface. The driving force for Mo nanoparticles migration was estimated with the aid of atomistic simulations. Mo nanoparticles, dragged by shrinking Cu particles, increased in size by absorbing their smaller stationary counterparts beneath the Cu particle. The model-based estimate of effective Mo diffusion coefficient was in good agreement with the literature value of surface self-diffusion coefficient of Mo. Our findings provide new insights into the mechanisms of solid-state dewetting in binary immiscible thin films with vastly different component diffusivities.

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