Strength determination for rough substrate-coating interfaces with three-dimensional defect structure

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Strength determination for rough substrate-coating interfaces with three-dimensional defect structure. / Klünsner, Thomas; Krobath, Martin; Konetschnik, Ruth et al.
In: International journal of refractory metals & hard materials, Vol. 2023, No. 112, 106149, 04.2023.

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Klünsner T, Krobath M, Konetschnik R, Tritremmel C, Maier-Kiener V, Samardzic D et al. Strength determination for rough substrate-coating interfaces with three-dimensional defect structure. International journal of refractory metals & hard materials. 2023 Apr;2023(112):106149. Epub 2023 Feb 8. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106149

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@article{57fb404a5d634f1fbb8b7bbbfd912c4d,
title = "Strength determination for rough substrate-coating interfaces with three-dimensional defect structure",
abstract = "Quantitative information on the strength of interfaces between thin ceramic coatings and their substrates is crucial when aiming to understand their failure behavior. Many technically relevant substrate-coating interfaces are not ideally planar, but rather rough and contain stress concentrators forming three-dimensional defect structures. An example for such a realistic case, a polycrystalline diamond coating that partially penetrates voids and cavities in its Co binder-depleted WC-Co hard metal substrate, was investigated within the current work with respect to its unknown interface strength behavior. Special focus was laid on the influence of the applied load direction on the observed fracture behavior. Micromechanical specimens were produced via focused ion beam milling as geometry variants of a micro shear compression specimen with their loaded areas' relative inclination towards the substrate-coating interface varied from 0° to 88°. Specimen loading was performed until fracture with a flat punch indenter in a scanning electron microscope. The recorded fracture loads were associated with the spatial stress distributions at fracture via finite element-based analysis. A plateau of the determined maximum principal stress triggering fracture in the ceramic-ceramic interfaces was found for inclination angles ≥45°. This plateau value was identified as the interface strength by observation of the crack path at the substrate-coating interface via scanning electron microscopy and analysis of the effectively loaded interface area values. The presented novel material testing technique gives first and previously not accessible insight into the fracture behavior of rough substrate-coating interfaces with complex defect structure.",
author = "Thomas Kl{\"u}nsner and Martin Krobath and Ruth Konetschnik and Christian Tritremmel and Verena Maier-Kiener and D. Samardzic and Werner Ecker and Christoph Czettl and Christian Mitterer and Daniel Kiener",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2023",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106149",
language = "English",
volume = "2023",
journal = "International journal of refractory metals & hard materials",
issn = "0263-4368",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "112",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Strength determination for rough substrate-coating interfaces with three-dimensional defect structure

AU - Klünsner, Thomas

AU - Krobath, Martin

AU - Konetschnik, Ruth

AU - Tritremmel, Christian

AU - Maier-Kiener, Verena

AU - Samardzic, D.

AU - Ecker, Werner

AU - Czettl, Christoph

AU - Mitterer, Christian

AU - Kiener, Daniel

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Elsevier Ltd

PY - 2023/4

Y1 - 2023/4

N2 - Quantitative information on the strength of interfaces between thin ceramic coatings and their substrates is crucial when aiming to understand their failure behavior. Many technically relevant substrate-coating interfaces are not ideally planar, but rather rough and contain stress concentrators forming three-dimensional defect structures. An example for such a realistic case, a polycrystalline diamond coating that partially penetrates voids and cavities in its Co binder-depleted WC-Co hard metal substrate, was investigated within the current work with respect to its unknown interface strength behavior. Special focus was laid on the influence of the applied load direction on the observed fracture behavior. Micromechanical specimens were produced via focused ion beam milling as geometry variants of a micro shear compression specimen with their loaded areas' relative inclination towards the substrate-coating interface varied from 0° to 88°. Specimen loading was performed until fracture with a flat punch indenter in a scanning electron microscope. The recorded fracture loads were associated with the spatial stress distributions at fracture via finite element-based analysis. A plateau of the determined maximum principal stress triggering fracture in the ceramic-ceramic interfaces was found for inclination angles ≥45°. This plateau value was identified as the interface strength by observation of the crack path at the substrate-coating interface via scanning electron microscopy and analysis of the effectively loaded interface area values. The presented novel material testing technique gives first and previously not accessible insight into the fracture behavior of rough substrate-coating interfaces with complex defect structure.

AB - Quantitative information on the strength of interfaces between thin ceramic coatings and their substrates is crucial when aiming to understand their failure behavior. Many technically relevant substrate-coating interfaces are not ideally planar, but rather rough and contain stress concentrators forming three-dimensional defect structures. An example for such a realistic case, a polycrystalline diamond coating that partially penetrates voids and cavities in its Co binder-depleted WC-Co hard metal substrate, was investigated within the current work with respect to its unknown interface strength behavior. Special focus was laid on the influence of the applied load direction on the observed fracture behavior. Micromechanical specimens were produced via focused ion beam milling as geometry variants of a micro shear compression specimen with their loaded areas' relative inclination towards the substrate-coating interface varied from 0° to 88°. Specimen loading was performed until fracture with a flat punch indenter in a scanning electron microscope. The recorded fracture loads were associated with the spatial stress distributions at fracture via finite element-based analysis. A plateau of the determined maximum principal stress triggering fracture in the ceramic-ceramic interfaces was found for inclination angles ≥45°. This plateau value was identified as the interface strength by observation of the crack path at the substrate-coating interface via scanning electron microscopy and analysis of the effectively loaded interface area values. The presented novel material testing technique gives first and previously not accessible insight into the fracture behavior of rough substrate-coating interfaces with complex defect structure.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147604817&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106149

DO - 10.1016/j.ijrmhm.2023.106149

M3 - Article

VL - 2023

JO - International journal of refractory metals & hard materials

JF - International journal of refractory metals & hard materials

SN - 0263-4368

IS - 112

M1 - 106149

ER -