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Epitaxy: the motion picture
Authors:Paul Finnie  Yoshikazu Homma  
Institution:

aInstitute for Microstructural Sciences, National Research Council of Canada, Building M-50, Montreal Road, Ottawa, Ont., Canada K1A OR6

bNTT Basic Research Laboratories, 3-1 Morinosato-Wakamiya, Atsugi-Shi, Kanagawa 243-0198, Japan

Abstract:The engineering of many modern electronic devices demands control over a crystal down to the thickness of a single layer of atoms—and future demands will be even more challenging. Such control is achieved by the method of crystal growth known as epitaxy, and that makes this method the subject of intense study. More than that, recent advances are revolutionizing our knowledge of how surfaces grow. In fact, growing surfaces show a beautifully rich variety of phenomena, many of which are only now beginning to be uncovered. In the past few years many surface imaging techniques have been used to give us a close look at how crystals grow—while they are growing. The purpose of this article will be to illustrate some of the ways real surfaces grow and change as revealed by some of the latest in situ microscopic imaging technologies.

It is often said that crystal growth is more of an art than a science. Here we will show that it is emphatically both.

Keywords:Epitaxy  Growth  Molecular beam epitaxy  Electron microscopy  Scanning tunneling microscopy
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