Properties of filtered-ion-beam-deposited diamondlike carbon as a function of ion energy
- 15 August 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 48 (7) , 4777-4782
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.48.4777
Abstract
A highly tetrahedrally bonded form on nonhydrogenated amorphous carbon (a-C) is produced by deposition from filtered medium-energy ion beams. A range of such films was grown and the -bonded fractions, plasmon energies, compressive stresses, and resistivities were measured as a function of ion energy. These properties are found to be strongly correlated and each to pass through a maximum at an ion energy of about 140 eV. The optimum ion energy is observed to depend on the type of carbon ions deposited and, possibly, on the deposition flux rate. The data are found to support deposition models in which the bonding arises from the subplantation of incident ions, giving rise to a quenched increase in density and strain.
Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Properties of diamond-like carbonSurface and Coatings Technology, 1992
- Properties of diamond-like coatings prepared by vacuum arc depositionSurface and Coatings Technology, 1991
- Hard amorphous (diamond-like) carbonsProgress in Solid State Chemistry, 1991
- Subplantation model for film growth from hyperthermal speciesPhysical Review B, 1990
- EELS analysis of vacuum arc-deposited diamond-like filmsPhilosophical Magazine Letters, 1988
- Structure and hardness of diamond-like carbon films prepared by arc evaporationJournal of Materials Science Letters, 1988
- Abrasive wear resistance of ion-deposited hard-carbon films as a function of deposition energyJournal of Applied Physics, 1988
- Transparent carbon film prepared by mass-separated negative-carbon-ion-beam depositionJournal of Applied Physics, 1987
- Comparison of diamondlike coatings deposited with C+ and various hydrocarbon ion beamsApplied Physics Letters, 1987
- Preparation and structure of carbon film deposited by a mass-separated C+ ion beamJournal of Applied Physics, 1984