Growth of C36-films on diamond surface through molecular dynamics simulation


Autoria(s): Du, Aijun; Pan, Z.Y.; Huang, Z.; Li, Z.J.; Wei, Q.; ZHANG, Z.X.
Data(s)

01/10/2002

Resumo

In this paper, the initial stage of films assembled by energetic C36 fullerenes on diamond (001)–(2 × 1) surface at low-temperature was investigated by molecular dynamics simulation using the Brenner potential. The incident energy was first uniformly distributed within an energy interval 20–50 eV, which was known to be the optimum energy range for chemisorption of single C36 on diamond (001) surface. More than one hundred C36 cages were impacted one after the other onto the diamond surface by randomly selecting their orientation as well as the impact position relative to the surface. The growth of films was found to be in three-dimensional island mode, where the deposited C36 acted as building blocks. The study of film morphology shows that it retains the structure of a free C36 cage, which is consistent with Low Energy Cluster Beam Deposition (LECBD) experiments. The adlayer is composed of many C36-monomers as well as the covalently bonded C36 dimers and trimers which is quite different from that of C20 fullerene-assembled film, where a big polymerlike chain was observed due to the stronger interaction between C20 cages. In addition, the chemisorption probability of C36 fullerenes is decreased with increasing coverage because the interaction between these clusters is weaker than that between the cluster and the surface. When the incident energy is increased to 40–65 eV, the chemisorption probability is found to increased and more dimers and trimers as well as polymerlike-C36 were observed on the deposited films. Furthermore, C36 film also showed high thermal stability even when the temperature was raised to 1500 K.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/61170/

Publicador

World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.

Relação

DOI:10.1142/S021797920201467X

Du, Aijun, Pan, Z.Y., Huang, Z., Li, Z.J., Wei, Q., & ZHANG, Z.X. (2002) Growth of C36-films on diamond surface through molecular dynamics simulation. International Journal of Modern Physics B, 16(26), pp. 3971-3978.

Fonte

School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Science & Engineering Faculty

Tipo

Journal Article