A method is introduced to decrease the computational labor of the standard level set method for propagating interfaces. The fast approach uses only points close to the curve at every time step. We describe this new algorithm and compare its efficiency and accuracy with the standard level set approac
A Level-Set Method for Simulating Island Coarsening
โ Scribed by D.L. Chopp
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 217 KB
- Volume
- 162
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9991
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Modeling of microstructural evolution during thin-film deposition requires a knowledge of several key activation energies (surface diffusion, island edge atom diffusion, adatom migration over descending step edges, etc.). These and other parameters must be known as a function of crystal orientation. In order to generate values for these parameters, we have developed a numerical simulation in tandem with physical experiments. By tuning the simulation to the results from experiments we can extract and verify approximate values for these parameters. The numerical method we use is based upon the level set method. Our model is a continuum model in directions parallel to the crystal facet, and resolves each discrete atomic layer in the normal direction. The model includes surface diffusion, step edge dynamics, and attachment/detachment rates all of which may depend upon the local geometry of the step edge. The velocity field for advancing the island edges in the level set framework is generated by computing the equilibrium adatom density on the flat terraces resulting in Laplace's equation with mixed boundary conditions at the step edges. We have turned to the finite element method for solving this equation, which results in very good agreement with analytically known solutions and with experiment.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
We present a level set based numerical algorithm for simulating a model of epitaxial growth. The island dynamics model is a continuum model for the growth of thin films. In this paper, we emphasize the details of the numerical method used to simulate the island dynamics model.
A numerical investigation of grain-boundary grooving by means of a level set method is carried out. An idealized polycrystalline interconnect which consists of grains separated by parallel grain boundaries aligned normal to the average orientation of the surface is considered. Initially, the surface
We develop a fast method to localize the level set method of Osher and Sethian (1988, J. Comput. Phys. 79, 12) and address two important issues that are intrinsic to the level set method: (a) how to extend a quantity that is given only on the interface to a neighborhood of the interface; (b) how to