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Fysik & material 3.7

Heat-treated coatings grow harder but more brittle, new research shows

Scientists have identified a tradeoff in aluminum-silicate coatings: heating them during manufacturing makes them stronger and denser, but significantly more prone to cracking. The finding could reshape how manufacturers balance durability against damage resistance in protective coatings used in electronics, optics, and aerospace applications.

Originaltitel: Effects of deposition temperature on the mechanical and structural properties of amorphous Al–Si–O thin films prepared by radio frequency magnetron sputtering

Abstrakt

<p>Aluminosilicate (Al–Si–O) thin films containing up to 31 at.% Al and 23 at.% Si were prepared by reactive RF magnetron co-sputtering. Mechanical and structural properties were measured by indentation and specular reflectance infrared spectroscopy at varying Si sputtering target power and substrate temperature in the range 100 to 500 °C. It was found that an increased substrate temperature and Al/Si ratio give denser structure and consequently higher hardness (7.4 to 9.5 GPa) and higher reduced elastic modulus (85 to 93 GPa) while at the same time lower crack resistance (2.6 to 0.9 N). The intensity of the infrared Si-O-Si/Al asymmetric stretching vibrations shows a linear dependence with respect to Al concentration. The Al–O–Al vibrational band (at 1050 cm−1) shifts towards higher wavenumbers with increasing Al concentration which indicates a decrease of the bond length, evidencing denser structure and higher residual stress, which is supported by the increased hardness. The same Al–O–Al vibrational band (at 1050 cm−1) shifts towards lower wavenumber with increasing substrate temperature indicating an increase in the average coordination number of Al.</p>

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