Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1898086 Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena 2007 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The growth of crystal surfaces, under nonequilibrium conditions, involves the displacement of mono-atomic steps by atom diffusion and atom incorporations into steps. The time-evolution of the growing crystal surface is thus modeled by a free boundary value problem [known as the Burton–Cabrera–Franck model]. In the presence of an asymmetry of the kinetic coefficients (Erlich–Schwoebel barriers), ruling the rates of incorporation of atoms at each step, it has been shown that a train of straight steps is unstable under two-dimensional transverse perturbations. This instability is now known as the Bales–Zangwill instability (meandering instability). We study the nonlinear evolution of the step meandering instability that occurs on a crystalline vicinal surface under growth, in the absence of evaporation, in the limit of a weak asymmetry of atom incorporation at the steps. We derive a nonlinear amplitude equation displaying spatiotemporal coarsening in the limit of weak Erlich–Schwoebel effect. We characterize the self-similar solutions of this equation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Applied Mathematics
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