Dynamics of nanoscale pattern formation of an epitaxial monolayer
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5953048
DOI10.1016/S0022-5096(01)00023-0zbMath0998.74006WikidataQ126459543 ScholiaQ126459543MaRDI QIDQ5953048
Publication date: 26 November 2002
Published in: Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5096(01)00023-0
phase field model; pattern formation; nonlinear diffusion equation; concentration-dependent surface stress; elastic substrate; epitaxial monolayer; nonstructure; self-assembly; superlattices; two-phase monolayer
Related Items
Spontaneous instability of soft thin films on curved substrates due to van der Waals interaction, Pattern formation and geometry of the manifold, Pattern formation on a stretchable substrate, Stability and shape evolution of voids and channels due to surface misfit, Multi-scale solid oxide fuel cell materials modeling, Creep flow, diffusion, and electromigration in small scale interconnects, Instabilities of core-shell heterostructured cylinders due to diffusions and epitaxy: Spheroidization and blossom of nanowires, On stability of self-assembled nanoscale patterns, Adatoms and their relation to surface stress., The orientation of the self-assembled monolayer stripes on a crystalline substrate., Sequential rearrangement of information in formation of patterns, Buckling and postbuckling of a compressed thin film bonded on a soft elastic layer: a three-dimensional analysis, A continuum model on the nanomesa and nanowell formation in Langmuir-Blodgett ferroelectric polymeric films, An iterative-perturbation scheme for treating inhomogeneous elasticity in phase-field models, Surface evolution of elastically stressed films under deposition by a diffuse interface model, Epitaxy of binary compounds and alloys
Cites Work
- Applications of semi-implicit Fourier-spectral method to phase field equations
- Multiscale deformation and fracture in materials and structures: The James R. Rice 60th anniversary volume.
- Composition modulation and nanophase separation in a binary epilayer
- Contact Mechanics
- Free Energy of a Nonuniform System. I. Interfacial Free Energy