4.7 Article

Grazing incidence fast atom diffraction in high-pressure conditions

Journal

SURFACES AND INTERFACES
Volume 37, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surfin.2023.102754

Keywords

Surface structure analysis; Grazing incidence fast atom diffraction; Thin film growth; Atom-surface interactions; Decoherence

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Grazing Incidence Fast Atom Diffraction (GIFAD) is a recent technique used for characterizing surface structures and real-time monitoring of thin film growth. It has typically been used in Ultra-High-Vacuum conditions, but our study shows that it can operate at pressures as high as 10-2 mbar, allowing for new research opportunities in various deposition methods.
Grazing Incidence Fast Atom Diffraction (GIFAD) is a recent technique for characterizing surface structures and real-time monitoring of thin film growth. Up to now, GIFAD has only been used in Ultra-High-Vacuum condi-tions, typically in the range of 10-10 to 10-8 mbar, and has therefore only been considered for high vacuum deposition methods like Molecular Beam Epitaxy or very low-pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD). At pressures exceeding 10-6 mbar, gas phase collisions along the atom beam trajectory not only reduce the mean free path but also degrade the beam coherence length and thus potentially suppress the diffraction signal. In addition, pressures lower than 10-5 mbar are required to maintain a low noise level on the scattered particle detector. In a new configuration, we demonstrate that GIFAD can operate at pressure as high as 10-2 mbar of argon with well-contrasted diffraction patterns. This opens wide avenues for the study of surface reactivity, thin film growth in Magnetron Sputtering Deposition, where electron diffraction is inevitably perturbed by the electromagnetic fields. This High-Pressure version of GIFAD could also be extended to Reactive Pulsed Laser Deposition and many CVD variants.

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