Structure-stress relationships in nanocrystalline multilayered Al0.7Cr0.3N/Al0.9Cr0.1N coatings studied by cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction
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In: Materials and Design, Vol. 170, 107702, 15.05.2019, p. 1-9.
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Structure-stress relationships in nanocrystalline multilayered Al0.7Cr0.3N/Al0.9Cr0.1N coatings studied by cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction
AU - Klima, Stefan
AU - Jäger, Nikolaus
AU - Hruby, Hynek
AU - Mitterer, Christian
AU - Keckes, Jozef
AU - Burghammer, M.
AU - Daniel, Rostislav
PY - 2019/5/15
Y1 - 2019/5/15
N2 - In this work, cross-sectional position-resolved X-ray nanodiffraction with a beam diameter of ~50 nm, was used to characterize the depth evolution of microstructure, texture and residual stress across an Al 0.7 Cr 0.3 N/Al 0.9 Cr 0.1 N multilayer coating cross-section deposited by cathodic arc evaporation. The method allowed to resolve variations in microstructure and stress state in all individual sublayers of the multilayer coating which was synthesized to include three different design approaches separated in individual sections. By this cross-sectional combinatorial approach, phase (de)stabilization in an alternating cubic and hexagonal multilayer structure (section 1), incident particle energy-dependent microstructure depth-gradients in the cubic phases (section 2) and phase (de)stabilization related to a gradual phase change from cubic to hexagonal (section 3) were investigated. While the in-plane residual stresses in the cubic AlCrN phase (sections 1 and 2) slightly fluctuated between −3 and −3.5 GPa, the compressive stress state in the hexagonal AlCrN phase showed a layer thickness dependency with values up to −6.5 GPa for sublayer thicknesses below 100 nm and down to −1 GPa for sublayer thicknesses above 600 nm. The presented results document that the cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction is a highly effective characterization method to investigate coatings with optimised architecture and dedicated stress design.
AB - In this work, cross-sectional position-resolved X-ray nanodiffraction with a beam diameter of ~50 nm, was used to characterize the depth evolution of microstructure, texture and residual stress across an Al 0.7 Cr 0.3 N/Al 0.9 Cr 0.1 N multilayer coating cross-section deposited by cathodic arc evaporation. The method allowed to resolve variations in microstructure and stress state in all individual sublayers of the multilayer coating which was synthesized to include three different design approaches separated in individual sections. By this cross-sectional combinatorial approach, phase (de)stabilization in an alternating cubic and hexagonal multilayer structure (section 1), incident particle energy-dependent microstructure depth-gradients in the cubic phases (section 2) and phase (de)stabilization related to a gradual phase change from cubic to hexagonal (section 3) were investigated. While the in-plane residual stresses in the cubic AlCrN phase (sections 1 and 2) slightly fluctuated between −3 and −3.5 GPa, the compressive stress state in the hexagonal AlCrN phase showed a layer thickness dependency with values up to −6.5 GPa for sublayer thicknesses below 100 nm and down to −1 GPa for sublayer thicknesses above 600 nm. The presented results document that the cross-sectional X-ray nanodiffraction is a highly effective characterization method to investigate coatings with optimised architecture and dedicated stress design.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062997476&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.matdes.2019.107702
DO - 10.1016/j.matdes.2019.107702
M3 - Article
VL - 170
SP - 1
EP - 9
JO - Materials and Design
JF - Materials and Design
SN - 0264-1275
M1 - 107702
ER -