Douglass S. Kalika, David W. Giles, et al.
Journal of Rheology
Studies by low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) and Auger electron spectroscopy of nickel films grown in ultra-high vacuum onto a clean Fe{001} surface show that the films have the body-centered cubic structure with the same lattice constant and the same multilayer relaxation as the clean substrate, as long as they are thinner than about 6 layers. LEED intensity analyses show that the multilayer relaxation of both clean Fe{001} and 3-layer thick Ni films involves 5% contraction of the first and 5% expansion of the second interlayer spacing. These new values of the multilayer relaxation of clean Fe{001} represent an improvement over previous determinations. Thicker Ni films, up to 100 layers, have a complicated structure that is neither b.c.c. nor f.c.c. Short anneals at temperatures between 200 and 650°C cause rapid diffusion of Ni into the Fe substrate with little evidence for formation of the stable f.c.c. phase of Ni. © 1987.
Douglass S. Kalika, David W. Giles, et al.
Journal of Rheology
J. Paraszczak, J.M. Shaw, et al.
Micro and Nano Engineering
K.A. Chao
Physical Review B
A.B. McLean, R.H. Williams
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics