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Corrosion Properties of Cathodic ARC evaporated Nitride Coatings

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 17:59 authored by Liam Ward, Antony Pilkington, Stephen Dowey, Edward Doyle
The use of thin hard metal nitride coatings reactively deposited by Physical Vapour Deposition (PVD) is well established in many engineering applications, specifically operations utilising cutting tools and metal forming dies. The PVD coatings offer enhanced tribological properties at the tool surface which is of paramount importance for wear control and to enhance productivity. One of the drawbacks that have restricted the use of cathodic arc PVD coatings as corrosion barriers is the macro-particle induced defects that occur during the arc evaporation process. Incorporation of spherical or lenticular macroparticles of 0.1-5 μm diameter results in a high degree of porosity in thin PVD coatings through void formation and generation of pinholes which leads to reduced corrosion resistance. However, it is anticipated that reducing the number of macro-particles and associated morphological defects would therefore lead to improved corrosion resistance. One route to achieving this is by the use of a pulsed arc current as opposed to a constant DC source in the arc evaporation process.

History

Start page

1

End page

8

Total pages

9

Outlet

Proceedings of Corrosion and Prevention Conference 2014 (CAP2014)

Editors

Alan Bird, Mohammad Ali, Erwin Gamboa

Name of conference

Corrosion and Prevention Conference 2014

Publisher

Australasian Corrosion Association

Place published

Melbourne, Australia

Start date

2014-09-21

End date

2014-09-24

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Australasian Corrosion Association

Former Identifier

2006050047

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-02-11

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