Results in Materials (Sep 2023)
Substrate bias effects on cathodic arc deposited Cr coatings
Abstract
We investigate the effects of substrate bias on cathodic arc deposition of Cr coatings without external substrate heating at four different substrate bias levels, floating, −30, −50, and −70 V. After 10 min of deposition, the substrate temperature reaches 180, 210, 230, and 260 °C for floating potential, −30, −50, and −70 V, respectively. Time-of-flight energy elastic recoil detection analysis shows that all grown coatings are of high purity, with no coating containing more than 0.2 at.% of C and/or O. Increasing the substrate bias also reduces the number of macroparticles, steers the texture from preferred [110]- to [100]-orientation and induces a residual compressive stress of ∼450 MPa in the coatings. The hardness of the coatings remains at a constant 7.5 GPa irrespective of the substrate bias. The four-point probe resistivity of the grown coatings is 15–17 μΩcm regardless of substrate bias, close to the 12.9 μΩcm of bulk Cr.