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Model Hierarchies for Surface Diffusion

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Title: Model Hierarchies for Surface Diffusion


1
Model Hierarchies for Surface Diffusion
  • Martin Burger

Johannes Kepler University Linz SFB
Numerical-Symbolic-Geometric Scientific
Computing Radon Institute for Computational
Applied Mathematics
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Modelling Stages Atomistic and continuum
  • Small Slopes Coherent coarse-graining of BCF
  • Joint work with Axel Voigt

3
Introduction
  • Surface diffusion processes appear in various
    materials science applications, in particular in
    the (self-assembled) growth of nanostructures
  • Schematic description particles are deposited
    on a surface and become adsorbed (adatoms). They
    diffuse around the surface and can be bound to
    the surface. Vice versa, unbinding and desorption
    happens.

4
Growth Mechanisms
  • Various fundamental surface growth mechanisms
    can determine the dynamics, most important
  • Attachment / Detachment of atoms to / from
    surfaces / steps
  • Diffusion of adatoms on surfaces / along steps,
    over steps

5
Atomistic Models on (Nano-)Surfaces
  • From Caflisch et. Al. 1999

6
Growth Mechanisms
  • Other effects influencing dynamics
  • Anisotropy
  • Bulk diffusion of atoms (phase separation)
  • Elastic Relaxation in the bulk
  • Surface Stresses
  • Effects induced by electromagnetic forces

7
Applications Nanostructures
  • SiGe/Si Quantum Dots
  • Bauer et. al. 99

8
Applications Nanostructures
  • SiGe/Si Quantum Dots

9
Applications Nano / Micro
  • Electromigration of voids in electrical circuits
  • Nix et. Al. 92

10
Applications Nano / Micro
  • Butterfly shape transition in Ni-based
    superalloys
  • Colin et. Al. 98

11
Applications Macro
  • Formation of Basalt Columns
  • Giants Causeway
  • Panska Skala (Northern Ireland)
  • (Czech Republic)
  • See http//physics.peter-kohlert.de/grinfeld.htm
    l

12
Atomistic Models on (Nano-)Surfaces
  • Standard Description (e.g. Pimpinelli-Villain)
  • (Free) Atoms hop on surfaces
  • Coupled with attachment-detachment kinetics
  • for the surface atoms on a crystal lattice
  • Hopping and binding parameters obtained from
    quantum energy calculations

13
Need for Continuum Models
  • Atomistic simulations (DFT -gt MD -gt KMC) limited
    to small / medium scale systems
  • Continuum models for surfaces easy to couple
    with large scale models

14
Continuum Surface Diffusion
  • Simple continuum model for surface diffusion in
    the isotropic case
  • Normal motion of the surface by minus
    surfaceLaplacian of mean curvature
  • Can be derived as limit of Cahn-Hilliard model
    with degenerate diffusivity
  • Physical conditions for validity difficult to
    verify

15
Continuum Surface Diffusion
  • Simple continuum model for surface diffusion in
    the isotropic case
  • Normal motion of the surface by minus
    surfaceLaplacian of mean curvature
  • Can be derived as limit of Cahn-Hilliard model
    with degenerate diffusivity
  • Physical conditions for validity difficult to
    verify

16
Surface Diffusion
  • Growth of a surface G with velocity
  • F ... Deposition flux, Ds .. Diffusion
    coefficient
  • W ... Atomic volume, s ... Surface density
  • k ... Boltzmann constant, T ... Temperature
  • n ... Unit outer normal, m ... chemical potential

17
Chemical Potential
  • Chemical potential m is the change of energy
    when adding / removing single atoms
  • In a continuum model, the chemical potential can
    be represented as a surface gradient of the
    energy (obtained as the variation of total energy
    with respect to the surface)
  • For surfaces represented by a graph, the
    chemical potential is the functional derivative
    of the energy

18
Surface Energy
  • Surface energy is given by
  • Standard model for anisotropic surface free
    energy

19
Faceting of Thin Films
  • Anisotropic Surface Diffusion mb-Hausser-Stöcker-
    Voigt-05

20
Faceting of Crystals
  • Anisotropic surface diffusion

21
Disadvantages of Continuum Models
  • Parameters (anisotropy, diffusion coefficients,
    ..) not known at continuum level
  • Relation to atomistic models not obvious
  • Several effects not included in standard
    continuum models Ehrlich-Schwoebel barriers,
    nucleation, adatom diffusion, step interaction ..

22
Small Slope Approximations
  • Large distance between steps in z-direction
  • Diffusion of adatoms mainly in (x,y)-plane
  • Introduce intermediate model step continuous in
    (x,y)-direction, discrete in z-direction

23
Step Interaction Models
  • To understand continuum limit, start with simple
    1D models
  • Steps are described by their position Xi and
    their sign si (1 for up or -1 for down)
  • Height of a step equals atomic distance a
  • Step height function

24
Step Interaction Models
  • Energy models for step interaction, e.g. nearest
    neighbour only
  • Scaling of height to maximal value 1, relative
    scale b between x and z, monotone steps

25
Step Interaction Models
  • Simplest dynamics by direct step interaction
  • Dissipative evolution for X

26
Continuum Limit
  • Introduce piecewise linear function w N on 0,1
    with values Xk at zk/N
  • Energy
  • Evolution

27
Continuum Height Function
  • Function w is inverse of height function u
  • Continuum equation by change of variables
  • Transport equation in the limit, gradient flow in
    the Wasserstein metric of probability measures (u
    equals distribution function)

28
Continuum Height Function
  • Transport equation in the limit, gradient flow in
    the Wasserstein metric of probability measures (u
    equals distribution function)
  • Rigorous convergence to continuum standard
    numerical analysis problem
  • Max / Min of the height function do not change
    (obvious for discrete, maximum principle for
    continuum). Large flat areas remain flat

29
Non-monotone Step Trains
  • Treatment with inverse function not possible
  • Models can still be formulated as metric gradient
    flow on manifolds of measures
  • Manifold defined by structure of the initial
    value (number of hills and valleys)

30
BCF Models
  • In practice, more interesting class are BCF-type
    models (Burton-Cabrera-Frank 54)
  • Micro-scale simulations by level set methods etc
    (Caflisch et. al. 1999-2003)
  • Simplest BCF-model

31
Chemical Potential
  • Chemical potential is the difference between
    adatom density and equilibrium density
  • From equilibrium boundary conditions for adatoms
  • From adatom diffusion equation (stationary)

32
Continuum Limit
  • Two additional spatial derivatives lead to formal
    4-th order limit (Pimpinelli-Villain 97, Krug
    2004, Krug-Tonchev-Stoyanov-Pimpinelli 2005)
  • 4-th order equations destroy various properties
    of the microscale model (flat regions stay never
    flat, global max / min not conserved ..)
  • Is this formal limit correct ?

33
Continuum Limit
  • Formal 4-th order limit

34
Gradient Flow Formulation
  • Reformulate BCF-model as dissipative flow
  • Analogous as above, we only need to change metric
  • P appropriate projection operator

35
Gradient Flow Structure
  • Time-discrete formulation
  • Minimization over manifold
  • for suitable deformation T

36
Continuum Limit
  • Manifold constraint for continuous time
  • for a velocity V
  • Modified continuum equations

37
Continuum Limit
  • 4th order vs. modified 4th order

38
Example adatoms
  • Explicit model for surface diffusion including
    adatoms Fried-Gurtin 2004, mb 2006
  • Adatom density d, chemical potential m, normal
    velocity V, tangential velocity v, mean curvature
    k, bulk density r
  • Kinetic coefficient b, diffusion coefficient L,
    deposition term r

39
Surface Free Energy
  • Surface free energy y is a function of the
    adatom density
  • Chemical potential is the free energy variation
  • Surface energy

40
Numerical Simulation - Surfaces
41
Outlook
  • Limiting procedure analogous for more complicated
    and realistic BCF-models, various effects
    incorporated in continuum. Direct relation of
    parameters to BCF models
  • Relation of parameters from BCF to atomistic
    models
  • Possibility for multiscale schemes continuum
    simulation of surface evolution, local atomistic
    computations of parameters

42
Download and Contact
  • Papers and Talks
  • www.indmath.uni-linz.ac.at/people/burger
  • e-mail martin.burger_at_jku.at
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