Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5361630 | Applied Surface Science | 2009 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The growth process of silver thin films deposited by pulsed laser ablation in a controlled inert gas atmosphere was investigated. A pure silver target was ablated in Ar atmosphere, at pressures ranging between 10 and 100Â Pa, higher than usually adopted for thin film deposition, at different numbers of laser shots. All of the other experimental conditions such as the laser (KrF, wavelength 248Â nm), the fluence of 2.0Â JÂ cmâ2, the target to substrate distance of 35Â mm, and the temperature (295Â K) of the substrates were kept fixed. The morphological properties of the films were investigated by transmission and scanning electron microscopies (TEM, SEM). Film formation results from coalescence on the substrate of near-spherical silver clusters landing as isolated particles with size in the few nanometers range. From a visual inspection of TEM pictures of the films deposited under different conditions, well-separated stages of film growth are identified.
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Authors
E. Fazio, F. Neri, P.M. Ossi, N. Santo, S. Trusso,