Abstract

During the growth of WC based thin films, carbon can be introduced by either a non-reactive or reactive deposition route. In this study, we compare the influence of the carbon origin on the coating properties, sputtering three different target materials – a ceramic WC, a ceramic WC including a conventional cobalt binder, and a metallic tungsten (W) target – in reactive (acetylene, C2H2) as well as non-reactive (pure Ar) atmospheres. The morphology changes, independently to the target type and atmosphere used, from crystalline (hex-W2C rich to pure fcc-WCx) to a nanocomposite (fcc-WCx nanometre sized grains embedded in an amorphous matrix) structure, up to amorphous coatings, only dominated by the prevalent C/W ratio. The cobalt binder however leads to a preferred amorphization of the coatings. The highest hardness is obtained for predominantly fcc structured WC0.67 (WC ceramic target), H = 40 ± 1.7 GPa, exhibiting also an excellent intrinsic fracture toughness of KIC = 3.3 ± 0.33 MPa·m1/2 obtained by micro-mechanical testing. Furthermore, the bonding nature of carbon is distinctly affected by the reactive carbon source, leading to more pronounced π-bonded carbon peak with increasing C2H2/Ar flow rates.

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