Effects of Duty Cycle on Texture Orientation and Composition of TiCx Nanostructured coatings
- Authors: Shanaghi A.1, Chu P.K.2
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Affiliations:
- Materials engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering
- Department of Physics and Department of Materials Science and Engineering
- Issue: Vol 54, No 4 (2018)
- Pages: 642-647
- Section: Nanoscale and Nanostructured Materials and Coatings
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/2070-2051/article/view/204274
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S207020511804024X
- ID: 204274
Cite item
Abstract
Nanostructured titanium carbide (TiCx) coatings are deposited on steel substrates by plasma chemical vapor deposition using three different duty cycles of 33, 40, and 50% and characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The relationship between the texture orientation/elemental concentration and duty cycle can be divided into two regimes, carbide (TiCx) state and oxycarbide (TiCxOy) state. The coatings crystallize into a TiC NaCl-type crystal structure (FCC) in the carbide and oxycarbide states and a smaller “x” in the TiCx coatings causes the transformation of the preferred orientation of (200) in the carbide state to (111) in the oxycarbide state. A poorly crystallized anatase phase is also observed from the coatings deposited using duty cycles of 40 and 50% and this anatase phase is detected from the oxycarbide state.
Keywords
About the authors
Ali Shanaghi
Materials engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering
Author for correspondence.
Email: alishanaghi@gmail.com
Iran, Islamic Republic of, Malayer
Paul K. Chu
Department of Physics and Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Email: alishanaghi@gmail.com
China, Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong
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