The Effect of Inhibitor Transport on Leveling in Electrodeposition

and

© 1991 ECS - The Electrochemical Society
, , Citation Kenneth G. Jordan and Charles W. Tobias 1991 J. Electrochem. Soc. 138 1251 DOI 10.1149/1.2085768

1945-7111/138/5/1251

Abstract

The electrodeposition of nickel into an angular trench in the presence of coumarin, a widely used inhibitor, is simulated using boundary layer approximations representative of flow parallel and transverse to the groove. Based on the diffusion‐adsorption mechanism of leveling action, the dependence of the developing contours on variations in the Langmuir coefficient and inhibitor/metal‐ion flux ratio are investigated. Leveling efficiency is shown to be highest for thin, planar boundary layers, and lowest for contour following boundary layers. The model successfully predicts the leveling‐off of the inhibitor effect with increasing inhibitor vs. metal‐ion flux, and that there is an optimal mass transfer boundary layer thickness, or flux of additive which results in superior leveling performance. Satisfactory agreement is found between the predicted contours, obtained by solving the model equations using the boundary element method, and the experimental leveling efficiencies determined by previous investigators.

Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

10.1149/1.2085768