Abstract

AbstractThe performance of polymer surface treatment using plasma immersion ion implantation (PIII) depends on many operating parameters, such as treatment duration, radiofrequency power, pulsed bias voltage and pulse repetition rate, and the ion fluence applied on the polymer surface. Currently, the identification of optimal operating parameters to achieve specific performance targets is heavily based on trail and error with extensive experimental testing. Herein, we present an optimisation method based on sensitivity analysis using polynomial chaos expansion and experimental design with Kriging surrogate model to greatly reduce the amount of experiments. The combined effects of PIII operating parameters on low‐density polyethylene surface modifications are investigated, demonstrating the validation and effectiveness of the method and design. The new approach offers highly accurate and computationally efficient way for achieving optimum radical density, wettability and optical transmittance that are important for biomedical applications.

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