4.4 Article

Time-Resolved Grazing Incidence X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy for the In Situ Investigation of the Initial Stages of Sputter-Deposited Copper Thin Films

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/pssa.202100514

Keywords

grazing incidence EXAFS; roughness evolution; sputter deposition; thin-film growth; time resolution

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [05K19PXA]
  2. Projekt DEAL

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The growth of thin copper films on float glass substrates using sputter deposition was studied in situ with X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, showing different stages of film growth from the formation of copper clusters to 3D growth of Cu crystallites. The method provides detailed analysis of film thickness and surface roughness, offering further prospects for research in this field.
The sputter deposition and the growth of thin copper films on float glass substrates are in situ studied using grazing incidence, reflection mode X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy with subsecond time resolution. The experimental data are compared with model calculations, assuming the presence of crystalline, face-centered cubic metallic Cu nanostructures. From a detailed analysis of the measured spectra, the film thickness as well as the surface roughness is determined, leading to a detailed understanding of the films growth as a function of the sputter deposition time. In particular, different stages of film growth can clearly be distinguished from the fits of the experimental data. The results suggest the formation of isolated, approximately nm-sized copper clusters in the initial phase of the film deposition for the first few seconds, a coalescence phase with a nominal thickness of approximate to 1.5-2.8 nm, constant roughness of about 1.4 nm for the subsequent approximate to 5 s, and finally 3D growth of the Cu crystallites in the film for later stages of film growth. Further prospects of the methodology are given.

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