Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1675447 Thin Solid Films 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Diamond chemical vapour deposition (CVD) on steel represents a difficult task. The major problem is represented by large diffusion of carbon into steel at CVD temperatures. This leads to very low diamond nucleation and degradation of steel microstructure and properties. Recent work [R. Polini, F. Pighetti Mantini, M. Braic, M. Amar, W. Ahmed, H. Taylor, Thin Solid Films 494 (2006) 116] demonstrated that well-adherent diamond films can be grown on high-speed steels by using a TiC interlayer deposited by the PVD-arc technique. The resulting multilayer (TiC/diamond) coating had a rough surface morphology due to the presence of droplets formed at the substrate surface during the reactive evaporation of TiC. In this work, we first present an extensive Raman investigation of 2 μm, 4 μm and 6 μm thick diamond films deposited by hot filament CVD on TiC interlayers obtained by the PVD-arc technique. The stress state of the diamond was dependent on both the films thickness and the spatial position of the coating on the substrate. In fact, on the top of TiC droplets, the stress state of the diamond was much lower than that of diamond in flatter substrate areas. These results showed that diamond films deposited on rough TiC interlayers exhibited a wide distribution of stress values and that very large compressive stress exists in the diamond film grown on flat regions of steel substrates with a TiC interlayer. Diamond films could accommodate stresses as large as 10 GPa without delamination.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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