Nanoscale stress and microstructure gradients across a buckled Mo-Cu bilayer: Cu self-annealing triggered by interface delamination

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Nanoscale stress and microstructure gradients across a buckled Mo-Cu bilayer: Cu self-annealing triggered by interface delamination. / Lassnig, Alice; Todt, Juraj; Tkadletz, Michael et al.
In: Acta Materialia, Vol. 2025, No. 283, 120465, 15.10.2024.

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@article{55186088c54843beb490af3bcd973d93,
title = "Nanoscale stress and microstructure gradients across a buckled Mo-Cu bilayer: Cu self-annealing triggered by interface delamination",
abstract = "Residual stresses in thin film structures significantly impact their mechanical properties and affect interface delamination. Highly compressively stressed thin films buckling is the predominant interfacial failure mode due to strain energy release. In the present study the effect of cross-sectional stress and microstructural gradients of thin films on the buckling behavior are explored in a model material system consisting of a thin Cu film sputtered onto glass and a highly compressively stressed 500 nm thick Mo overlayer causing buckling delamination at the Cu-glass interface. Employing synchrotron cross-sectional X-ray nano-diffraction, multiaxial X-ray elastic strain and microstructure distributions were explored across the cross-section of the adhering and buckled bilayer, respectively. In the adhering state, a gradual thickness evolution of columnar microstructure and residual stress was found for Mo, while in Cu, no microstructure changes and only minimal stress variations were detected along the film thickness. After delamination, diffraction peak broadening and changes in unstrained lattice parameters in the Cu sublayer indicated structural defect annihilation and grain coarsening. These microstructural changes were further validated via cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. The evaluated residual stress dis- tributions across the two sublayers of the pristine and buckled bilayer were used to quantify the released strain energy per unit area due to buckling, amounting to 0.61 J/m2. Further cross-validation of experimental stress results with finite element simulations strengthened the experimental findings, providing a comprehensive un- derstanding of the stress distribution across the buckled bilayer.1.",
keywords = "Thin films, buckle type delamination, high resolution stress gradients, transmission electron microscopy, Cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction",
author = "Alice Lassnig and Juraj Todt and Michael Tkadletz and Stanislav {\v Z}{\'a}k and Christian Mitterer and Medjahed, {Asma Aicha} and Manfred Burghammer and Jozef Keckes and Cordill, {Megan J.} and Michael Meindlhumer",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.actamat.2024.120465",
language = "English",
volume = "2025",
journal = "Acta Materialia",
issn = "1359-6454",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "283",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Nanoscale stress and microstructure gradients across a buckled Mo-Cu bilayer: Cu self-annealing triggered by interface delamination

AU - Lassnig, Alice

AU - Todt, Juraj

AU - Tkadletz, Michael

AU - Žák, Stanislav

AU - Mitterer, Christian

AU - Medjahed, Asma Aicha

AU - Burghammer, Manfred

AU - Keckes, Jozef

AU - Cordill, Megan J.

AU - Meindlhumer, Michael

PY - 2024/10/15

Y1 - 2024/10/15

N2 - Residual stresses in thin film structures significantly impact their mechanical properties and affect interface delamination. Highly compressively stressed thin films buckling is the predominant interfacial failure mode due to strain energy release. In the present study the effect of cross-sectional stress and microstructural gradients of thin films on the buckling behavior are explored in a model material system consisting of a thin Cu film sputtered onto glass and a highly compressively stressed 500 nm thick Mo overlayer causing buckling delamination at the Cu-glass interface. Employing synchrotron cross-sectional X-ray nano-diffraction, multiaxial X-ray elastic strain and microstructure distributions were explored across the cross-section of the adhering and buckled bilayer, respectively. In the adhering state, a gradual thickness evolution of columnar microstructure and residual stress was found for Mo, while in Cu, no microstructure changes and only minimal stress variations were detected along the film thickness. After delamination, diffraction peak broadening and changes in unstrained lattice parameters in the Cu sublayer indicated structural defect annihilation and grain coarsening. These microstructural changes were further validated via cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. The evaluated residual stress dis- tributions across the two sublayers of the pristine and buckled bilayer were used to quantify the released strain energy per unit area due to buckling, amounting to 0.61 J/m2. Further cross-validation of experimental stress results with finite element simulations strengthened the experimental findings, providing a comprehensive un- derstanding of the stress distribution across the buckled bilayer.1.

AB - Residual stresses in thin film structures significantly impact their mechanical properties and affect interface delamination. Highly compressively stressed thin films buckling is the predominant interfacial failure mode due to strain energy release. In the present study the effect of cross-sectional stress and microstructural gradients of thin films on the buckling behavior are explored in a model material system consisting of a thin Cu film sputtered onto glass and a highly compressively stressed 500 nm thick Mo overlayer causing buckling delamination at the Cu-glass interface. Employing synchrotron cross-sectional X-ray nano-diffraction, multiaxial X-ray elastic strain and microstructure distributions were explored across the cross-section of the adhering and buckled bilayer, respectively. In the adhering state, a gradual thickness evolution of columnar microstructure and residual stress was found for Mo, while in Cu, no microstructure changes and only minimal stress variations were detected along the film thickness. After delamination, diffraction peak broadening and changes in unstrained lattice parameters in the Cu sublayer indicated structural defect annihilation and grain coarsening. These microstructural changes were further validated via cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. The evaluated residual stress dis- tributions across the two sublayers of the pristine and buckled bilayer were used to quantify the released strain energy per unit area due to buckling, amounting to 0.61 J/m2. Further cross-validation of experimental stress results with finite element simulations strengthened the experimental findings, providing a comprehensive un- derstanding of the stress distribution across the buckled bilayer.1.

KW - Thin films

KW - buckle type delamination

KW - high resolution stress gradients

KW - transmission electron microscopy

KW - Cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction

U2 - 10.1016/j.actamat.2024.120465

DO - 10.1016/j.actamat.2024.120465

M3 - Article

VL - 2025

JO - Acta Materialia

JF - Acta Materialia

SN - 1359-6454

IS - 283

M1 - 120465

ER -