The effect of electron-surface scattering and thiol adsorption on the electrical resistivity of gold ultrathin films
Author
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Henríquez, Ricardo
Author
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Campo, Valeria del
Author
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González Fuentes, Claudio
Author
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Correa Puerta, Jonathan
Author
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Moraga, Luis
Author
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Flores Carrasco, Marcos
Author
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Segura, Rodrigo
Author
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Donoso, Sebastián
Author
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Marín, Francisca
Author
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Bravo, Sergio
Author
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Häberle, Patricio
Admission date
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2019-05-29T13:29:52Z
Available date
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2019-05-29T13:29:52Z
Publication date
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2017
Cita de ítem
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Applied Surface Science 407 (2017) 322–327
Identifier
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01694332
Identifier
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10.1016/j.apsusc.2017.02.163
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/168869
Abstract
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In order to study the effect of electron-surface scattering in gold ultrathin films (∼10 nm), we have prepared
a set of Au samples on mica on top of a chromium seedlayer (<1 nm). Chromium is added as a
metallic surfactant which enables surpassing the electric percolation threshold for substrate temperatures
above room temperature. We prepared samples with the same thickness but different topographies
setting different substrate temperatures. These modifications modulate the contributions of the different
electronic scattering mechanisms to the film resistivity. A second set of gold thin films deposited
on mica at room temperature, with different thicknesses between 8 and 100 nm, was also prepared to
compare the resisitivities of both sets through Mayadas and Shatzkes theory. We found that in samples
with thicknesses below 15 nm, the electron-surface scattering is indeed the dominant mechanism influencing
the film resistivity. To obtain further evidence of this prevalence, we developed a discrimination
method based on thiol adsorption. The film with the highest resistivity increase is the sample in which
electron-surface scattering is dominant. With this method, we observed that a large enhancement of the
electron-surface scattering not only occurs in samples with large diameters grains, but also if the film
has a reduced surface roughness.