MD-Predicted Phase diagrams for Pattern Formation due to Ion Irradiation
Scott A. Norris, Juha Samela, Laura Bukonte, Marie Backman,, Djurabekova Flyura, Kai Nordlund, Charbel S. Madi, Michael P. Brenner,, Michael J. Aziz

TL;DR
This paper predicts the transition mechanisms between smooth and patterned surfaces under ion irradiation using parameter-free simulations, revealing that atom redistribution, not sputtering, governs surface stability and pattern formation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, parameter-free multi-scale simulation approach to explain surface pattern transitions, challenging the sputtering-based paradigm.
Findings
Impact-induced atom redistribution drives surface pattern formation.
Sputter erosion is largely irrelevant for surface stability.
Predictions align well with experimental observations.
Abstract
Energetic particle irradiation of solids can cause surface ultra-smoothening, self-organized nanoscale pattern formation, or degradation of the structural integrity of nuclear reactor components. Periodic patterns including high-aspect ratio quantum dots, with occasional long-range order and characteristic spacing as small as 7 nm, have stimulated interest in this method as a means of sub-lithographic nanofabrication. Despite intensive research there is little fundamental understanding of the mechanisms governing the selection of smooth or patterned surfaces, and precisely which physical effects cause observed transitions between different regimes has remained a matter of speculation. Here we report the first prediction of the mechanism governing the transition from corrugated surfaces to flatness, using only parameter-free molecular dynamics simulations of single-ion impact induced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIon-surface interactions and analysis · Nuclear Materials and Properties · Fusion materials and technologies
