Abstract

High-temperature annealing in air of thick crystalline silver films deposited on high-purity nickel foils promotes solid-state dewetting, whereas no hole through the film is produced when annealing under high purity argon. Scanning electron microscopy observations of the film surface and of cross-sections reveal that dewetting occurs only if a nickel oxide layer forms at the silver-nickel interface, as a result of oxygen diffusion through the silver film. The main dewetting mechanism over short times (1h 1120K in air) is observed to be the condensation, at the silver-nickel oxide interface, of vacancies into voids which grow towards the free surface of the silver film.

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