Revealing mechanical and structural properties of Si-doped nanodiamond composite films through applied biasing voltages on WC − Co substrates

Silicon-doped nanodiamond composite (Si-NDC) films hold significant promise for advancing cutting tool performance in demanding applications. These films, created through coaxial arc plasma deposition from 1 at.% silicon blended graphite targets, eliminate the need for external heating, chemical rea...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of refractory metals & hard materials Vol. 119; p. 106518
Main Authors Diab, Mohamed Ragab, Egiza, Mohamed, Murasawa, Koki, Ohmagari, Shinya, Naragino, Hiroshi, Yoshitake, Tsuyoshi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.02.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0263-4368
2213-3917
DOI10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106518

Cover

More Information
Summary:Silicon-doped nanodiamond composite (Si-NDC) films hold significant promise for advancing cutting tool performance in demanding applications. These films, created through coaxial arc plasma deposition from 1 at.% silicon blended graphite targets, eliminate the need for external heating, chemical reactions, Co etching, or nanodiamond seeding on cemented carbide substrates. This study explores the influence of biasing voltages (0 V, −50 V, and − 100 V) during Si-NDC film deposition on their mechanical properties. As biasing voltage increased from 0 to −100 V, Si-NDC films displayed remarkable improvements in hardness (from 56 to 65 GPa) and Young's modulus (from 535 to 655 GPa). These enhancements stem from the presence of nanodiamonds, C − Si sp3 bonds, and unique features within the amorphous carbon matrix. Nevertheless, this transformation introduced higher internal stress levels (0.88 to 3.75 GPa), adversely affecting film-substrate adhesion, which decreased from a critical load of 31 N to 16.6 N for unbiased and − 100 V biased films, respectively. Intriguingly, unbiased films exhibited enhanced adhesion attributed to the formation of intermetallic compounds like CoSi2 and SiC. Surface roughness increased from 90 nm to 180 nm with −100 V biasing, attributed to droplet attraction. Biasing improved film hardness but aggravated internal stress, impacting adhesion and surface roughness. •Si-NDC films coated onto WC-Co with bias voltage influencing growth and properties.•Films densified and roughened due to bias-induced droplet attraction (Ra: 90 nm to 180 nm).•Higher biasing (−100 V) improved hardness from 56 to 65 GPa.•Enhanced hardness attributed to kinetic energy increase and presence of nanodiamonds.•Substrate bias increased compressive stress (0.88 GPa to 3.75 GPa), decreasing adhesion (31 N to 16.6 N).
ISSN:0263-4368
2213-3917
DOI:10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106518