Experiment shows thin films of dealloyed nanoporous gold
(NPG)
spontaneously detaching from massive gold base layers. NPG can also
densify near its external surface. This is naturally reproduced by
kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulation of dealloying and coarsening
and so appears generic for nanoscale network materials evolving by
surface diffusion. Near the porous layer’s external surface
and near its interface with the base layer, gradients in the depth-profile
of a laterally averaged mean surface curvature provide driving forces
for diffusion and cause divergences of the net fluxes of matter, leading
to accretion/densification or to erosion/disconnection. As a toy model,
the morphology evolution of substrate-supported nanopillars by surface
diffusion illustrates and confirms our considerations. Contrary to
cylindrical nanowires, the ligaments in nanoporous materials exhibit
pre-existing gradients in the mean curvature. The Plateau-Rayleigh
long-wavelength stability criterion is then not applicable and the
disconnection accelerated.