Study of Evolution of Surface Roughness of Cu Thin Films
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Abstract
Thin film technology is the foundation of wondrous technological advances made in the fields of
optoelectronic, photonic, magnetic and solid state electronic devices. Surface morphology of
deposited thin films and the method used in depositing thin films are of great interest. The
surface roughness plays a critical role in many applications and properties such as contact
mechanics, sealing, friction, adhesion, optics and electrical conductivity. The Dynamic Scaling
Theory was used to study the surface roughness and scaling behavior of Cu thin films grown on
glass substrate by DC magnetron sputtering at 75W power at varying time. The phase of
resulting thin films was characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), and growth of surface with
increasing time was studied by using Atomic Force Microscopy. Determination of the PSDF
(Power Spectral Density Function) and HHCF (Height-Height Correlation Function) of the films
deposited for different times were used to evaluate details of the kinetic roughening. From the
measured exponents, in conjunction with the computed ones, determination of the growth
mechanisms were carried out and the processes was classified within certain universality classes.
Detailed scaling analysis of surface fluctuation in real and fourier space yielded characteristic
exponents indicate the presence of super-roughening on the line of anomalous scaling and not
the conventional scaling obeying Family–Vicsek equation.
