Alloy formation at the Ni–Al interface for nickel films deposited on Al(110) surfaces |
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Authors: | V. Shutthanandan Adli A. Saleh R. J. Smith |
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Affiliation: | Physics Department, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA |
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Abstract: | Alloy formation at the Ni–Al interface for thin nickel films deposited on Al(110) surfaces has been studied using high-energy ion scattering/channeling (HEIS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). For nickel atoms deposited at room temperature on Al(110), a large amount of nickel–aluminum intermixing occurs at the interface. For the first two monolayers (ML) of deposited nickel, an NiAl-like compound is formed. The intermixing continues with a different rate, forming an Ni3Al-like compound for nickel coverages from 2 to 8 ML, at which point a nickel metal film begins to grow on the surface. Nickel atoms deposited at 250°C on the Al(110) surface exhibit no surface compound formation, but diffuse up to 400 Å into the aluminum substrate. Interatomic potentials based on the embedded-atom method (EAM) are used in a Monte Carlo approach to simulate the evolution of the Ni–Al(110) interface as a function of the nickel coverage. The calculated ion-scattering yields and X-ray photoelectron intensities from nickel and aluminum atoms in these simulated interfaces are in good quantitative agreement with the experimental results. The simulations show a high-density Ni–Al alloy forming at the Al(110) surface which apparently inhibits outward diffusion of aluminum, leading to the more nickel-rich alloy and finally nickel film growth. The ion-scattering simulations show an unusually large amount of backscattering occurring below the Ni–Al(110) interface, apparently associated with defocusing of the incident ion beam. |
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Keywords: | Aluminum High energy ion scattering (HEIS) Metal–metal interfaces Nickel X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy |
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