Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1669298 | Thin Solid Films | 2010 | 5 Pages |
A series of TiO2 thin films was deposited onto glass substrates without intentional heating or biasing by magnetron sputtering of a titanium target using Ar/O2 reactive mixtures over a broad range of total sputtering pressures from 0.12 Pa to 2.24 Pa. Each of the film types was deposited by the threshold poisoned mode at a specific given oxygen flow rate monitored in-situ by optical emission spectroscopy. Both the sputtering pressure and thermal annealing are the key factors for the TiO2 films to yield fast-response superhydrophilicity with a water contact angle of 5°. The mechanism of superhydrophilicity for the TiO2 films deposited by high-pressure sputtering will be discussed based on empirical studies of X-ray diffractometry, high-resolution scanning microscopy and atomic force spectroscopy.