Mechanisms of Three-Dimensional Solid-Phase Epitaxial Crystallization of Strontium Titanate
CRYSTAL GROWTH & DESIGN(2024)
摘要
Strontium titanate (SrTiO3, STO) is a complex metal oxide with a cubic perovskite crystal structure. Due to its easily described and understood crystal structure in the cubic phase, STO is an ideal model system for exploring the mechanistic details of solid-phase epitaxy (SPE) in complex oxides. SPE is a crystallization approach that aims to guide crystal growth at low homologous temperatures to achieve targeted microstructures. Beyond planar thin films, SPE can also exploit the addition of a chemically inert, noncrystallizing, amorphous obstacle in the path of crystallization to generate complex three-dimensional structures. The introduction of this mask fundamentally alters the SPE process, inducing a transition from two- to three-dimensional geometries and from vertical to lateral crystal growth under the influence of the crystal/mask/amorphous boundary. Using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and experiments, we identify several unique phenomena in the nanoscale growth behaviors in both conventional (unmasked) and masked SPE. Examining conventional SPE of STO, we find that crystallization at the interface is strongly correlated to, and potentially driven by, density fluctuations in the region of the amorphous STO near the crystalline/amorphous interface with a strong facet dependence. In the masked case, we find that the crystalline growth front becomes nonplanar near contact with the mask. We also observe a minimum vertical growth requirement prior to lateral crystallization. Both phenomena depend on the relative bulk and interfacial free energies of the three-phase (crystal/mask/amorphous) system.
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