The morphology of GaAs (001) surfaces grown using molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) was examined using scanning tunneling microscopy and force microscopy. Surprisingly, these surfaces show mound formation under certain growth conditions. In particular, when the growth conditions favor the nucleation of islands, regular mounds form. On the other hand, when the growth proceeds via step-flow these mounds are not seen. These multilayered features can be explained by the presence of a barrier at step-edges which hinders the diffusion of adatoms between layers. We show, using a Monte-Carlo simulation, that the addition of this step-edge barrier is sufficient to produce the mounding. We also develop a continuum model to study the large-scale, long-time...
International audienceWe revisit the step bunching instability without recourse to the quasistatic a...
We investigate experimentally and computationally the nonlinear replication of surface shapes during...
The surface of a film grown epitaxially on a crystalline substrate is generally rough, even if the ...
Atomic force microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs (001) homoepitaxy films grown by molecul...
The morphological evolution of GaAs (001) is studied during growth and equilibrium using several exp...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
The problem of a complete theory describing the far-from-equilibrium statistical mechanics of epitax...
We investigate the surface evolution of Gallium Arsenide (001) during homoepitaxial growth with mole...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
Molecular beam epitaxy has recently been applied to the growth and self assembly of nanostructures o...
We examine the morphological evolution of growing surfaces using Monte Carlo simulations of a solid ...
We describe here a study of lateral length scale dependence of the transient evolution of surface co...
A study of the surface morphology of homoepitaxial GaAs(001) by means of ex situ atomic force micros...
Surface physics aims at understanding the basic atomistic processes and mechanisms responsible for t...
International audienceWe revisit the step bunching instability without recourse to the quasistatic a...
We investigate experimentally and computationally the nonlinear replication of surface shapes during...
The surface of a film grown epitaxially on a crystalline substrate is generally rough, even if the ...
Atomic force microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs (001) homoepitaxy films grown by molecul...
The morphological evolution of GaAs (001) is studied during growth and equilibrium using several exp...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
The problem of a complete theory describing the far-from-equilibrium statistical mechanics of epitax...
We investigate the surface evolution of Gallium Arsenide (001) during homoepitaxial growth with mole...
Scanning tunneling microscopy studies have been performed on GaAs homoepitaxial films grown by molec...
Molecular beam epitaxy has recently been applied to the growth and self assembly of nanostructures o...
We examine the morphological evolution of growing surfaces using Monte Carlo simulations of a solid ...
We describe here a study of lateral length scale dependence of the transient evolution of surface co...
A study of the surface morphology of homoepitaxial GaAs(001) by means of ex situ atomic force micros...
Surface physics aims at understanding the basic atomistic processes and mechanisms responsible for t...
International audienceWe revisit the step bunching instability without recourse to the quasistatic a...
We investigate experimentally and computationally the nonlinear replication of surface shapes during...
The surface of a film grown epitaxially on a crystalline substrate is generally rough, even if the ...