Abstract:
The influence of argon pressure $P$ (0.13 $\le P\le$ 1 Pa) and vacuum annealing on the microstructure and texture of $d\approx$ 300 nm thick cobalt films magnetron-sputtered on a SiO$_2$/Si substrate has been investigated. It has been shown that the films deposited at
0.26 $\le P<1$ Pa have a columnar microstructure with a mixed hcp-Co(002)/fcc-Co(111) phase. Annealing results in a more uniform microstructure owing to the grain size growth and improves the hcp-Co(002)/fcc-Co(111) texture. The films deposited at 0.13 $\le P<$ 0.18 Pa have a mixed crystalline phase: the hcp-Co(002)/fcc-Co(111) and hcp-Co(101) phases coexist with an fcc crystalline phase and fcc-Co(200) texture. Finally, films grown at $P\approx$ 0.13 Pa are characterized by the fcc-Co(200) texture, and their microstructure is nonuniform over the thickness: at the film–substrate interface, there exists a $d_c\approx$ 100–130 nm thick layer with a quasi-uniform microstructure, which becomes granulated at $d>d_c$. Annealing results in a more uniform microstructure of these films due to grain growth, improves the fcc-Co(200) texture, and causes the appearance of the fcc-Co(111)/hcp-Co(002) phase.