David Vanderbilt, J. Tersoff
Physical Review Letters
A crystal facet is metastable under stress, but the process of growth or sublimation roughens the facet and is expected to render it unstable. This poses a fundamental limit for heteroepitaxial growth of planar layers, e.g., in semiconductor devices. An analysis shows that this facet-growth instability can be suppressed to an arbitrary degree by growing slowly. Moreover, the local stress (“force dipole”) inherent in atomic steps introduces a new, purely kinetic effect that dominates at low strain and can render planar growth dynamically stable. © 2001 The American Physical Society.
David Vanderbilt, J. Tersoff
Physical Review Letters
Lugang Bai, J. Tersoff, et al.
Physical Review Letters
Neng-Ping Wang, S. Heinze, et al.
Nano Letters
J. Tersoff
ESSDERC Satellite Symposium 1989