Abstract

Vapor co-deposited metal nanocomposites with immiscible components have shown to have several superior properties including mechanical performance, radiation tolerance, and enhanced functionalities. The morphology and structural design of these nanocomposites are important in determining the expression of these properties. The conditions used to deposit thin film nanocomposites are the governing factors in determining the final nanostructure. In this work, we link the effects of process gas pressure, substrate temperature, and sputtering target power on resultant Cu/Nb thin film nanostructures. We find that for films with equiatomic phase fractions of Cu and Nb, inhomogeneous precipitate segregation dominated the structure at lower substrate temperature depositions while higher temperatures distributed the Cu and Nb phases more uniformly. Increasing process gas pressure during deposition lead to a spatially homogeneous, nanocrystalline structure of Cu/Nb. In situ annealing of this sample shows that the phase separated morphology of the two immiscible materials depends on the initial composition. Finally, compositions of Cu and Nb that were highly disparate lead to interface segregation of the minority phase. The morphological evolution observed in the Cu/Nb system is compatible with modified structural zone models for immiscible thin film systems.

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