Abstract
Controllable low-temperature (500°C) deposition of amorphous a-SiC ceramic films on Si(100) was achieved using a pulsed dc-magnetron puttering system in a mixture of CH4/Ar. The nanoscale elastic-plastic response of the film upon contact loading was systematically characterized and analyzed by depth sensing nanoindentation technique using a Berkovich tip indenter. The mean values for elastic modulus and hardness were found to be 170±10 and 11.0±0.8GPa, respectively. The onset of elastic-plastic transition occurred with contact loading of 70µN at a depth of 10nm. By coupling the Hertzian contact theory and Johnson's cavity model, the critical shear stress (7.7GPa), yielding strength (14.4GPa), plastic zone size (30–300nm), and plastic work ratio (0.18–0.40) of a-SiC thin film under nanoindentation were determined. Based on the experimental results, the resolved shear stress analysis and deformation behavior were found to be consistent with the interpretation that the deformation behavior was associated with local readjustment of small clusters of atoms. The deformation mechanism was also explained on the basis of shear transformation zones (STZs) amorphous plasticity theory.
Published Version
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