Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting

Solid-state dewetting is the process by which micro– and nano–scale films, wires, and other fabricated structures on a substrate evolve toward geometries which reduce the overall surface free energy of the system. This process, also sometimes referred to as agglomeration, occurs at elevated temperat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: L'Etoile, Maxwell A.
Other Authors: Thompson, Carl V.
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2024
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/154376
_version_ 1811081474234908672
author L'Etoile, Maxwell A.
author2 Thompson, Carl V.
author_facet Thompson, Carl V.
L'Etoile, Maxwell A.
author_sort L'Etoile, Maxwell A.
collection MIT
description Solid-state dewetting is the process by which micro– and nano–scale films, wires, and other fabricated structures on a substrate evolve toward geometries which reduce the overall surface free energy of the system. This process, also sometimes referred to as agglomeration, occurs at elevated temperatures and is mediated by surface selfdiffusion. Regardless of initial conditions, dewetting eventually leads to the formation of one or more particles whose morphology is determined by the orientational dependence of the constituent material’s surface free energy density. Subtle differences in initial conditions can determine whether a system dewets into a single particle or many and whether this evolution occurs over the course of minutes, hours, days, or years. Furthermore, the intermediate stages of dewetting behavior can exhibit profound complexity, and many materials systems are prone to a host of morphological instabilities. Although decades of research have steadily increased the extent of our knowledge about solid-state dewetting, a generalizable, predictive understanding of dewetting behavior has remained elusive, in large part because of the difficulty of modeling systems with strong crystalline anisotropy. The work in this thesis focuses on advancing our understanding of the dewetting behavior of single-crystal materials and consists chiefly of two parallel thrusts: the development of a powerful new method for simulating solid-state dewetting and the use of lithographic patterning to experimentally study dewetting in systems with precisely controlled geometries. We apply these two synergistic approaches to understanding the morphological stability of ruthenium nanowires, the effects of ambient conditions on dewetting nickel (110) films, and the dendritic morphologies which arise at the corners of holes in dewetting films.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T11:47:15Z
format Thesis
id mit-1721.1/154376
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T11:47:15Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/1543762024-05-02T03:38:15Z Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting L'Etoile, Maxwell A. Thompson, Carl V. Carter, W. Craig Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Solid-state dewetting is the process by which micro– and nano–scale films, wires, and other fabricated structures on a substrate evolve toward geometries which reduce the overall surface free energy of the system. This process, also sometimes referred to as agglomeration, occurs at elevated temperatures and is mediated by surface selfdiffusion. Regardless of initial conditions, dewetting eventually leads to the formation of one or more particles whose morphology is determined by the orientational dependence of the constituent material’s surface free energy density. Subtle differences in initial conditions can determine whether a system dewets into a single particle or many and whether this evolution occurs over the course of minutes, hours, days, or years. Furthermore, the intermediate stages of dewetting behavior can exhibit profound complexity, and many materials systems are prone to a host of morphological instabilities. Although decades of research have steadily increased the extent of our knowledge about solid-state dewetting, a generalizable, predictive understanding of dewetting behavior has remained elusive, in large part because of the difficulty of modeling systems with strong crystalline anisotropy. The work in this thesis focuses on advancing our understanding of the dewetting behavior of single-crystal materials and consists chiefly of two parallel thrusts: the development of a powerful new method for simulating solid-state dewetting and the use of lithographic patterning to experimentally study dewetting in systems with precisely controlled geometries. We apply these two synergistic approaches to understanding the morphological stability of ruthenium nanowires, the effects of ambient conditions on dewetting nickel (110) films, and the dendritic morphologies which arise at the corners of holes in dewetting films. Ph.D. 2024-05-01T14:31:57Z 2024-05-01T14:31:57Z 2022-05 2023-11-22T21:18:56.255Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/154376 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle L'Etoile, Maxwell A.
Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title_full Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title_fullStr Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title_short Effects of Crystalline Anisotropy on Solid-state Dewetting
title_sort effects of crystalline anisotropy on solid state dewetting
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/154376
work_keys_str_mv AT letoilemaxwella effectsofcrystallineanisotropyonsolidstatedewetting