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The project focuses in particular on the description of the interaction between noble metal films, widely used in different areas of micro- and nanofabrication, and extremely thin films of reactive transition metals, used to enhance adhesion onto the substrate - and thus referred as ``adhesion layers". Different material and multilayer combinations are investigated; particular emphasis is placed on the description and use of the recently developed transmission Kikuchi diffraction technique for the in-situ study of thin-film nanostructure evolution with changing chemical composition and temperature.
The project focuses in particular on the description of the interaction between noble metal films, widely used in different areas of micro- and nanofabrication, and extremely thin films of reactive transition metals, used to enhance adhesion onto the substrate - and thus referred as ``adhesion layers". Different material and multilayer combinations are investigated; particular emphasis is placed on the description and use of the recently developed transmission Kikuchi diffraction technique for the in-situ study of thin-film nanostructure evolution with changing chemical composition and temperature.
==Transmission Kikuchi diffraction==

Revision as of 15:24, 12 January 2018

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Nanoscale characterization of ultra-thin metal films for nanofabrication applications

  • Project type: Ph.D. project
  • Project responsible: Matteo Todeschini
  • Supervisors: Jakob Birkedal Wagner, Flemming Jensen, Anpan Han
  • Partners involved: DTU Danchip/Cen

Project Description

The aim of this Ph.D. project is to obtain a deeper understanding of the interaction at the nanoscale level between ultra-thin metal films used in micro/nanofabrication, exploiting the unique capabilities of thin-film fabrication and characterization offered by the combination of the DTU Danchip/Cen facilities.

With the constant miniaturization of the devices and the fabrication of increasingly complex multi-material structures, the interaction between different ultra-thin layers has gained considerable importance in the field of thin-film science and technology in recent years. Therefore the characterization of such interactions in a wide range of temperatures and the description of their impact on the chemical composition, morphology and distribution of crystallographic orientations of multilayer thin-films is of utmost importance.

The project focuses in particular on the description of the interaction between noble metal films, widely used in different areas of micro- and nanofabrication, and extremely thin films of reactive transition metals, used to enhance adhesion onto the substrate - and thus referred as ``adhesion layers". Different material and multilayer combinations are investigated; particular emphasis is placed on the description and use of the recently developed transmission Kikuchi diffraction technique for the in-situ study of thin-film nanostructure evolution with changing chemical composition and temperature.

Transmission Kikuchi diffraction