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Research Activities > Programs > Nonequilibrium Interface Dynamics > Workshop 1


Nonequilibrium Interface Dynamics:
Fundamental Physical Issues in Nonequilibrium Interface Dynamics


CSIC Building (#406), Seminar Room 4122.
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Drift-Induced Pattern Formation on Si(001) Vicinal Surfaces

Dr. Makio Uwaha

Department of Physics, Nagoya University, Japan


Abstract:   Bearing Si(001) vicinal surfaces in mind [1,2], we study drift-induced bunching and wandering of steps on a vicinal surface with anisotropic surface diffusion. The direction of fast diffusion alternates on consecutive terraces and evaporation is neglected.

When drift of adatoms induced by an external electric field is perpendicular to the steps, the vicinal face is unstable for pairing instability with both step-up and step-down drift. By means of Monte Carlo simulation [3] and numerical integration of a one-dimensional model, we study time development of step bunching. Large bunches appear irrespective of the drift direction, and their average size grows in a power low as N ∼ tα with α ≈ 1/2. The distance between steps in a bunch is sensitive to the step interaction potential.

When step bunching is suppressed by a strong step repulsion, step wandering takes place with step-up drift. Repulsive interaction between steps is found indispensable for the instability. Monte Carlo simulation shows that in-phase step wandering produces straight grooves. Nonlinear evolution equation for the step pattern is the same as that of Si(111) vicinal faces [4,5] although mechanisms for the instabilities are very different. Grooves widen slowly as their amplitudes increase in proportion to the square root of time.

[1] A. V. Latyshev et al., Aseev, Appl. Surf. Sci. 130, 98 (1998). [2] J.-F. Nielsen et al., Surf. Sci. 480, 84 (2001). [3] M. Sato et al,. J. Cryst. Growth 237- 239, 43 (2002). [4] O. Pierre-Louis et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 4221 (1998). [5] M. Sato et al., Phys. Rev. B 65, 245427 (2002).

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