Abstract

Oriented crystal growth on an amorphous substrate has been achieved using an artificially created surface-relief grating. Crystallites of KCl grown from a water solution onto a 320-nm spatial-period square-wave grating in SiO2 nucleated preferentially at vertical steps and grew with 〈100〉 directions parallel to the grating axis. It is proposed that artificially created surface microstructures may provide a new means of manipulating the growth and orientation of crystalline overlayers.

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