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Formation and Elimination of Surface Nanodefects on Ultraflat Metal Surfaces Produced by Template Stripping

17

Citations

30

References

2011

Year

Abstract

Ultraflat metal surfaces are used in template stripping (TS), which is a method for obtaining a metal with an average surface roughness on the order of <1 nm. This is important for plasmonics, for the production of high-quality SAM surfaces, and for many other applications. Herein we show for the first time that TS indeed introduces a very high density of surface nanodefects (twinning and stacking faults), which can strongly hinder surface-induced properties such as SAM ordering and plasmonic phenomena, despite the seemingly overall ultrahigh flatness. We have used state of the art characterization techniques such as HRXRD, spherical-aberration-corrected HRTEM, and STM. We also demonstrate how these nanodefects can be completely eliminated.

References

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