Abstract

By linking atomistic and mesoscopic scales, we formally show how a local steric effect can hinder crystal growth and lead to a buildup of adsorbed atoms (adatoms) on a supersaturated, (1+1)-dimensional surface. Starting from a many-adatom master equation of a kinetic restricted solid-on-solid (KRSOS) model with external material deposition, we heuristically extract a coarse-grained, mesoscale description that defines the motion of a line defect (i.e., a step) in terms of statistical averages over KRSOS microstates. Near thermodynamic equilibrium, we use error estimates to show that this mesoscale picture can deviate from the standard Burton-Cabrera-Frank (BCF) step flow model in which the adatom flux at step edges is linear in the adatom supersaturation. This deviation is caused by the accumulation of adatoms near the step, which block one another from being incorporated into the crystal lattice. In the mesoscale picture, this deviation manifests as a significant contribution from many-adatom microstates to the corresponding statistical averages. We carry out kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to numerically demonstrate how certain parameters control the aforementioned deviation. From these results, we discuss empirical corrections to the BCF model that amount to a nonlinear relation for the adatom flux at the step. We also discuss how this work could be used to understand the kinetic interplay between accumulation of adatoms and step motion in recent experiments of ice surfaces.

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