# Characterization of Defect Structure in Electrodeposited Nanocrystalline   Ni Films

**Authors:** Tam\'as Kolonits, P\'eter Jenei, Bence G. T\'oth, Zsolt Czig\'any,, Jen\H{o} Gubicza, L\'aszl\'o P\'eter, Imre Bakonyi

arXiv: 1703.05191 · 2017-03-16

## TL;DR

This study compares microstructural characterization methods on electrodeposited nanocrystalline Ni films with and without additives, revealing detailed structural changes and defect densities using XRD and TEM.

## Contribution

It introduces a comparative analysis of high-performance structural characterization techniques on identical Ni films, highlighting subtle microstructural differences due to additives.

## Key findings

- Additives eliminate columnar growth and refine grains.
- Additives increase dislocation and twin fault densities.
- Saccharin results in smaller grains and higher defect density.

## Abstract

The microstructure of electrodeposited Ni films produced without and with organic additives (saccharin and formic acid) was investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) line profile analysis and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Whereas the general effect of these additives on the microstructure (elimination of columnar growth as well as grain refinement) was reproduced, the pronounced intention of this study was to compare the results of various seldom-used high-performance structural characterization methods on identical electrodeposited specimens in order to reveal fine details of structural changes qualitatively not very common in this field. In the film deposited without additives, a columnar structure was observed showing similarities to the T-zone of structure zone models. Both formic acid and saccharin additives resulted in equiaxed grains with reduced size, as well as increased dislocation and twin fault densities in the nanocrystalline films. Moreover, the structure became homogeneous and free of texture within the total film thickness due to the additives. Saccharin yielded smaller grain size and larger defect density than formic acid. A detailed analysis of the grain size and twin boundary spacing distributions was carried out with the complementary application of TEM and XRD, by carefully distinguishing between the TEM and XRD grain sizes.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.05191