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Symmetry of surface nanopatterns induced by ion-beam sputtering: Role of anisotropic surface diffusion

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2016-04-19
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American Physical Society
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Ion-beam sputtering (IBS) is a cost-effective technique able to produce ordered nanopatterns on the surfaces of different materials. To date, most theoretical studies of this process have focused on systems which become amorphous under irradiation, e.g., semiconductors at room temperature. Thus, in spite of the large amount of experimental work on metals, or more recently on semiconductors at high temperatures, such experimental contexts have received relatively little theoretical attention. These systems are characterized by transport mechanisms, e.g., surface diffusion, which are anisotropic as a reflection of the crystalline structure not being overruled by the irradiation. Here, we generalize a previous continuum theory of IBS at normal incidence, in order to account for anisotropic surface diffusion. We explore systematically our generalized model in order to understand the role of anisotropy in the space-ordering properties of the resulting patterns.
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Pattern-Formation, Dynamics, Equation, Growth, Instabilities, Bombardment, Ripples, Field, Shape, Self-Organized nanostructures
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Renedo, J., Cuerno, R., Castro, M. y Muñoz García J. (2016). Symmetry of surface nanopatterns induced by ion-beam sputtering: Role of anisotropic surface diffusion. Physical Review B, 93 (15), 155424