Abstract
Controlling growth at crystalline surfaces requires a detailed and quantitative
understanding of the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters governing
mass transport. Many of these parameters can be determined by
analyzing the isothermal wandering of steps at a vicinal
[``step-terrace''] type surface [for a recent review see[JW99]]. In
the case of
crystals one finds that these meanderings
develop larger amplitudes as the equilibrium temperature is raised (as
is consistent with the statistical mechanical view of the meanderings
as arising from atomic interchanges). The classical theory due to
Herring, Mullins and others[M57], coupled with advances in
real-time experimental microscopy techniques, has proven very
successful in the applied development of such crystalline
materials. However in 1997 a series of experimental observations on
vicinal defects of heavily boron-doped Silicon crystals revealed that
these crystals were quite
in the sense that a lowering of
the equilibrium temperature led to increased amplitude for the
isothermal wanderings of a step edge [Han97]. In addition, at low
temperatures the step profile adopted a periodic saw-tooth structure
rather than the straight profile predicted by the classical
theories. This article examines a stored free energy model for such
crystals involving a (higher order) Landau/de Gennes type
order
parameter
term and provides a proof for the existence of a
minimizer.
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