Abstract

We model the deposition and growth of MgF(2) on a sapphire substrate as it occurs in a low-temperature atom-beam-deposition experiment. In the experiment, an (X-ray) amorphous film of MgF(2) is obtained at low temperatures of 170-180 K, and upon heating, this transforms to the expected rutile phase via the CaCl(2)-type structure. We confirm this from our simulations and propose a mechanism for this transformation. The growth process is analyzed as a function of the synthesis parameters, which include the substrate temperature, deposition rate of clusters, and types of clusters deposited. Upon annealing an initially amorphous deposit, we observe the formation of two competing nanocrystalline modifications during this process, which exhibit the CaCl(2) and CdI(2) structure types, respectively. We argue that this joint growth of the two nanocrystalline polymorphs stabilizes the kinetically unstable CaCl(2)-type structure on the macroscopic level long enough to be observed in the experiment.

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