posted on 2022-05-27, 16:36authored byYann L. Müller, Lars P.H. Jeurgens, Andrej Antušek, Vladyslav Turlo
The continuing trend in heterogeneous
integration (i.e., miniaturization
and diversification of devices and components) requires a fundamental
understanding of the phase stability and diffusivity of nanoconfined
metals in functional nanoarchitectures, such as nanomultilayers (NMLs).
Nanoconfinement effects, such as interfacial melting and anomalous
fast interfacial diffusion, offer promising engineering tools to enhance
the reaction kinetics at low temperatures for targeted applications
in the fields of joining, solid-state batteries, and low-temperature
sintering technologies. In the present study, the phase stability
and atomic mobility of confined metals in Cu/AlN NMLs were investigated
by molecular dynamics, with the interatomic potential compared to
the ab initio calculations of the Cu/AlN interface adhesion energy.
Simulations of the structural evolution of Cu/AlN nanomultilayers
upon heating in dependence on the Cu nanolayer thickness demonstrate
the occurrence of interfacial premelting, a melting point depression,
as well as extraordinary fast solid-state diffusion of confined Cu
atoms along the defective heterogeneous interfaces. The model predictions
rationalize recent experimental observations of premelting and anomalous
fast interface diffusion of nanoconfined metals in nanostructured
Cu/AlN brazing fillers at strikingly low temperatures.