Crystals grow by laying down new layers of material which can either correspond in size to the height of one unit cell (elementary steps) or multiple unit cells (macrosteps). Surprisingly, experiments have shown that macrosteps can grow under conditions of low supersaturation and high impurity density such that elementary step growth is completely arrested. We use atomistic simulations to show that this is due to two effects: the fact that the additional layers bias fluctuations in the position of the bottom layer towards growth and by a transition, as step height increases, from a 2D to a 3D nucleation mechanism. © 2016 American Physical Society.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Dynamic coarsening of crystal surfaces by formation of macrosteps is explained by an improved model ...
The impact of ad-dimer diffusion on the morphology of an epitaxially growing stepped surface is stud...
We study epitaxial growth onto a patterned substrate by considering the nucleation and motion of ste...
Nanoscale self-assembly is naturally subject to impediments at the nanoscale. The recently developed...
Epitaxial growth on a surface vicinal to a high-symmetry crystallographic plane occurs through the p...
The growth of crystals from solution is a fundamental process of relevance to such diverse areas as ...
Recent observations of the growth of protein crystals have identified two different growth regimes. ...
Molecular beam epitaxy has recently been applied to the growth and self assembly of nanostructures o...
International audienceThe quasistatic approximation is a useful but questionable simplification for ...
Item does not contain fulltextIn general, crystal growth proceeds by the addition of growth units at...
The step model introduced by Burton, Cabrera and Frank is known to give a good description of the su...
A one-dimensional (1D) continuum description of growth on vicinal surfaces in the presence of immobi...
The growth of crystals from solution is a fundamental process of relevance to such diverse areas as ...
We study the effect of step permeability on step instabilities on a growing vicinal face. When alter...
Theoretical aspects of crystal growth far from equilibrium are investigated. The study of temporal c...
Dynamic coarsening of crystal surfaces by formation of macrosteps is explained by an improved model ...
The impact of ad-dimer diffusion on the morphology of an epitaxially growing stepped surface is stud...
We study epitaxial growth onto a patterned substrate by considering the nucleation and motion of ste...
Nanoscale self-assembly is naturally subject to impediments at the nanoscale. The recently developed...
Epitaxial growth on a surface vicinal to a high-symmetry crystallographic plane occurs through the p...
The growth of crystals from solution is a fundamental process of relevance to such diverse areas as ...
Recent observations of the growth of protein crystals have identified two different growth regimes. ...
Molecular beam epitaxy has recently been applied to the growth and self assembly of nanostructures o...
International audienceThe quasistatic approximation is a useful but questionable simplification for ...
Item does not contain fulltextIn general, crystal growth proceeds by the addition of growth units at...
The step model introduced by Burton, Cabrera and Frank is known to give a good description of the su...
A one-dimensional (1D) continuum description of growth on vicinal surfaces in the presence of immobi...
The growth of crystals from solution is a fundamental process of relevance to such diverse areas as ...
We study the effect of step permeability on step instabilities on a growing vicinal face. When alter...
Theoretical aspects of crystal growth far from equilibrium are investigated. The study of temporal c...
Dynamic coarsening of crystal surfaces by formation of macrosteps is explained by an improved model ...
The impact of ad-dimer diffusion on the morphology of an epitaxially growing stepped surface is stud...
We study epitaxial growth onto a patterned substrate by considering the nucleation and motion of ste...