Abstract

The scratch adhesion and tribological behavior of graded Cr/CrN/CrTiN coatings deposited on tool steels by closed-field unbalanced magnetron sputtering (CFUBMS) by varying the Ti sputtering current (ITi) was investigated in detail. The hardness and modulus of these coatings were determined prior to scratch and wear testing using nanoindentation methods, which yielded increasing hardness, modulus, and H/E and H3/E2 ratios with increasing Ti content. Progressive loading scratch tests from 1N to 150N at a speed of 4mm/min were carried out using a Rockwell diamond indenter at a loading rate of 100N/min on a 6mm linear track. The dry sliding wear tests with a pin-on-disc arrangement under various wear parameters (sliding velocity, sliding distance and normal load) were carried out to investigate the tribological response of these graded coatings. The scratch test yielded the highest critical loads, i.e. LC1=~141N and LC2=~149N and a high scratch crack propagation resistance parameter (CPRS)=~1074 for the coating with the lowest Ti content. The initial failure of the coatings was due to conformal cracking leading to significant plastic deformation before complete substrate exposure. The coatings also yielded wear rates of the order ~10–16m3/Nm with abrasive wear as the dominant wear mechanism. Both the scratch toughness and wear resistance of the coatings decrease with increasing Ti content. The decrease in scratch toughness, wear resistance and damage tolerance of these coatings can be attributed to increasing modulus of these coatings as the Ti content increases, implying that a modulus mismatch exists between coating and substrate.

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