Laser Processing: Surface Treatment and Film Deposition

MRS Bulletin ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 58-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold A. Davis ◽  
Gennady E. Remnev ◽  
Regan W. Stinnett ◽  
Kiyoshi Yatsui

Over the past decade, researchers in Japan, Russia, and the United States have been investigating the application of intense-pulsed-ion-beam (IPIB) technology (which has roots in inertial confinement fusion programs) to the surface treatment and coating of materials. The short range (0.1–10 μm) and high-energy density (1–50 J/cm2) of these short-pulsed (t ≥ 1 μs) beams (with ion currents I = 5–50 kA, and energies E = 100–1,000 keV) make them ideal flash-heat sources to rapidly vaporize or melt the near-surface layer of targets similar to the more familiar pulsed laser deposition (PLD) or laser surface treatment. The vaporized material can form coatings on substrates, and surface melting followed by rapid cooling (109 K/s) can form amorphous layers, dissolve precipitates, and form nonequilibrium microstructures.An advantage of this approach over laser processing is that these beams deliver 0.1–10 KJ per pulse to targets at expected overall electrical efficiencies (i.e., the ratio of extracted ion-beam energy to the total energy consumed in generating the beam) of 15–40% (compared to < 1% for the excimer lasers often used for similar applications). Consequently IPIB hardware can be compact and require relatively low capital investment. This opens the promise of environmentally conscious, low-cost, high-throughput manufacturing. Further, efficient beam transport to the target and excellent coupling of incident ion energy to targets are achieved, as opposed to lasers that may have limited coupling to reflective materials or produce reflecting plasmas at high incident fluence. The ion range is adjustable through selection of the ion species and kinetic energy, and the beam energy density can be tailored through control of the beam footprint at the target to melt (1–10 J/cm2) or to vaporize (10–50 J/cm2) the target surface. Beam pulse durations are short (≥ 1 μs) to minimize thermal conduction. Some disadvantages of IPIB processing over laser processing include the need to form and propagate the beams in vacuum, and the need for shielding of x-rays produced by relatively low-level electron current present in IPIB accelerators. Also these beams cannot be as tightly focused onto targets as lasers, making them unsuitable for applications requiring treatment on small spatial scales.


2008 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 14-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Trueba ◽  
Stefano P. Trasatti

An alternative approach was developed for surface treatment of as-received commercial AA 2024 T3 by using a pyrrole-based silane (SiPy). For film deposition, just one immersion step is enough, followed by curing. SiPy layer structure contains both polysiloxane bonds and pyrrole oligomers, with some degree of doping, giving a highly coherent layer. The superior film quality with respect to simple polysiloxane, is probably the main reason for the better corrosion performance obtained for SiPy on 2024.


2008 ◽  
Vol 516 (7) ◽  
pp. 1405-1409 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.M. Kang ◽  
S.G. Yoon ◽  
D.H. Yoon

2009 ◽  
Vol 1153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sukreen Hana Herman ◽  
Susumu Horita

AbstractWe have been investigating fabrication of a crystallized Si (c-Si) film deposited on a glass substrate at low temperature, using a poly-yttria-stabilized zirconia (poly-YSZ) film as a seed layer. It can be expected that the crystallographic information of the YSZ layer transmits to the deposited Si film so that it stimulates its crystallization even at lower temperature. To reduce the crystallization temperature further, we focused on the surface treatment of the YSZ layer, in which it was dipped in the HF solution, followed by rinsing with deionized water (DIW) or with ethanol.After depositing the poly-YSZ layer by reactive magnetron sputtering on the quartz glass substrate, the Si film was deposited directly on it by e-beam vacuum evaporation in <10-6 Pa. The Raman spectra of the Si films deposited at 430 °C on the ethanol-rinsed glass without YSZ layer and on the DIW-rinsed YSZ layer showed amorphous phase. However, on the ethanol-rinsed YSZ layer, they showed a strong peak of c-Si of the deposited film, even at 350 °C, and indicated the beginning of the crystallization at 320 °C. This means that the YSZ layer enhanced the Si film crystallization, and that the ethanol-rinse was effective for low-temperature crystallization. The crystalline fraction of the Si film varied with the yttria content and the surface treatment of the YSZ layer prior to the Si film deposition. From the XPS results, we found out that fluorine F were adsorbed on the surface and were bonded with the Y. The Y 3d and F 1s peaks observed from the ethanol-rinsed YSZ were higher than those of the DIW rinse, which suggests that the Y and adsorbed F on the surface were removed by the DIW rinse, but remained even after the ethanol rinse. Based on the Raman and XPS results, we can speculate that the excessive amount of F on the YSZ layer surface prior to the Si film deposition play an important role on the Si film crystallization. We observed the surface of the Secco-etched Si/YSZ films deposited at 320, 350, and 430 °C by SEM. The number of crystallized Si grains was denser at higher temperature than that of lower temperature. That is, the Si film deposited at 430 °C was crystallized thoroughly on the whole substrate, but some regions of the Si films deposited at 350 and 320 °Cwere amorphous and removed by the Secco etching. The grain sizes were in the range from 20 to 40 nm, and the size at the lower deposition temperature was more uniform than the higher temperature. From SIMS observation, it was found that Zr atoms diffuse from the interface with the YSZ layer.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 77-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rogerio Amaral Tupinambá ◽  
Cristiane Aparecida de Assis Claro ◽  
Cristiane Aparecida Pereira ◽  
Celestino José Prudente Nobrega ◽  
Ana Paula Rosifini Alves Claro

ABSTRACT Introduction: Plasma-polymerized film deposition was created to modify metallic orthodontic brackets surface properties in order to inhibit bacterial adhesion. Methods: Hexamethyldisiloxane (HMDSO) polymer films were deposited on conventional (n = 10) and self-ligating (n = 10) stainless steel orthodontic brackets using the Plasma-Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) radio frequency technique. The samples were divided into two groups according to the kind of bracket and two subgroups after surface treatment. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) analysis was performed to assess the presence of bacterial adhesion over samples surfaces (slot and wings region) and film layer integrity. Surface roughness was assessed by Confocal Interferometry (CI) and surface wettability, by goniometry. For bacterial adhesion analysis, samples were exposed for 72 hours to a Streptococcus mutans solution for biofilm formation. The values obtained for surface roughness were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney test while biofilm adhesion were assessed by Kruskal-Wallis and SNK test. Results: Significant statistical differences (p< 0.05) for surface roughness and bacterial adhesion reduction were observed on conventional brackets after surface treatment and between conventional and self-ligating brackets; no significant statistical differences were observed between self-ligating groups (p> 0.05). Conclusion: Plasma-polymerized film deposition was only effective on reducing surface roughness and bacterial adhesion in conventional brackets. It was also noted that conventional brackets showed lower biofilm adhesion than self-ligating brackets despite the absence of film.


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