Step-edge instability during epitaxial growth of graphene from SiC(0001)
Valery Borovikov, Andrew Zangwill

TL;DR
This paper investigates the step-edge instability during epitaxial graphene growth on SiC(0001), proposing a heat release mechanism and analyzing the growth kinetics to explain observed finger-like structures.
Contribution
It introduces a continuum model and linear stability analysis to understand the kinetics of graphene growth and the formation of finger-like structures during epitaxy.
Findings
The model predicts shape perturbation growth based on temperature and pressure conditions.
Semi-quantitative agreement with experimental finger separation measurements.
Identifies key parameters influencing step-edge instability during growth.
Abstract
The unique electronic properties of graphene offer the possibility that it could replace silicon when microelectronics evolves to nanoelectronics. Graphene grown epitaxially on silicon carbide is particularly attractive in this regard because SiC is itself a useful semiconductor and, by suitable manipulation of the growth conditions, epitaxial films can be produced that exhibit all the transport properties of ideal, two-dimensional graphene desired for device applications. Nevertheless, there is little or no understanding of the actual kinetics of growth, which is likely to be required for future process control. As a step in this direction, we propose a local heat release mechanism to explain finger-like structures observed when graphene is grown by step flow decomposition of SiC(0001). Using a continuum equation of motion for the shape evolution of a moving step, a linear stability…
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