Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9809601 | Surface and Coatings Technology | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
TiNi-based films sputtered at room temperature are amorphous; thus, postsputtering annealing is a must because shape memory effect only occurs in their crystalline form. It is suggested that the lowest possible annealing temperature be used in a bid to conserve thermal processing budgets, and to minimize thermal stresses and possible interfacial reactions between film and its substrate. In this paper, Ti49.5Ni47.5Cu3 (at.%) films with a thickness of 3.5 μm were deposited on Si substrate by cosputtering of TiNi and Cu targets at room temperature, then annealed at different temperatures from 430 to 650 °C. Phase transformation behaviors, crystalline structure, residual stress and stress evolution of the films were systematically studied. At the gas pressure of 0.8 mTorr, the residual stress in the as-deposited films was 260 MPa, compressive. A minimum annealing temperature (450 °C) was necessary for film crystallization; thus, large thermal stress could be released significantly due to martensitic transformation. With increase of annealing temperature, crystallite and martensite plate sizes in the film increased; thus, both recovery stress and stress-increase rate increased, while the transformation temperatures shifted to higher values. The surface roughness increased drastically with increase of annealing temperature in correlation to martensitic transformation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
Yongqing Fu, Hejun Du, Sam Zhang, YanWei Gu,