latticemismatch
Lattice mismatch is the relative difference between the lattice spacings of two crystalline materials, typically a substrate and a film grown on it. In epitaxial deposition, the film may be forced to adopt the substrate’s lattice constant, creating strain. The mismatch is commonly expressed as M = (a_s - a_f)/a_s, multiplied by 100%, where a_s is the substrate lattice constant and a_f is the film lattice constant. The sign indicates whether the film is stretched (tensile) or compressed.
When the mismatch is small, the film can grow coherently and adopt the substrate lattice constant up
Strategies to manage lattice mismatch include using buffer layers with intermediate lattice constants, gradually grading the
Examples illustrate the range of challenges: nearly zero mismatch for GaAs on GaAs substrates; about 4% mismatch