Abstract

The elemental composition and the surface morphology of thin films grown by laser ablation of barium titanate with femtosecond pulses at 620 nm laser wavelength have been systematically studied according to the experimental pulsed-laser deposition parameters : laser energy density, oxygen pressure, substrate temperature, target–substrate distance and substrate position (in- and off-axis geometry). Firstly, even at high temperature (700 °C), the deposits consist of coalesced particles up to 1-μm in size, mixed in a poorly crystallised tetragonal BaTiO3 thin film. The particles formed in femtosecond pulsed-laser deposition induce a high surface roughness, which is observed whatever the experimental growth conditions and does not correspond to the droplets often observed during laser ablation in the nanosecond regime. As shown by plasma expansion dynamics, these particles propagate toward the substrate in the plasma plume with a low velocity, and are assumed to be produced by gas-phase reactions. Moreover, the cationic concentration evaluated through the Ba/Ti ratio strongly depends on the oxygen pressure in the ablation chamber and the angular position of the substrate along the normal to the target at laser impact. Indeed, the films appear to be enriched in the heavy element (Ba) when the substrate is located at high angular deviation. This fact is correlated to an increase in the lighter species (i.e. Ti) in the central part of the plasma plume.

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