Abstract:
Transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and vibrating-sample magnetometry are used to show that a metastable hcp structure can form in both nickel and Ni–Pd alloy films during alternating sputtering of the Ni and Pd components of composite targets. The hcp lattice parameters increase monotonically when the palladium content in a sputtered target increases in the range 0–75%. The ratio of the hcp lattice parameters $c/a$ is close to the ideal ratio for the hcp lattice (1.63) within the limits of experimental error. In the as-deposited state, nickel and Ni–Pd alloy films with an hcp structure have no magnetic moment. Upon annealing, the films transform into a ferromagnetic state with an fcc structure. The concentration dependence of the lattice parameter of the fcc solid solution $a_0$ is found to exhibit a positive deviation from Vegard’s law, which is characteristic of alloys with a concave liquidus line.