The Yttrium Effect on Nanoscale Structure, Mechanical Properties, and High-Temperature Oxidation Resistance of (Ti0.6Al0.4)(1-x) Y (x) N Multilayer Coatings
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Titre | The Yttrium Effect on Nanoscale Structure, Mechanical Properties, and High-Temperature Oxidation Resistance of (Ti0.6Al0.4)(1-x) Y (x) N Multilayer Coatings |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2017 |
Auteurs | Wang J, Yazdi MArab Pour, Lomello F, Billard A, Kovacs A, Schuster D, Guet C, White TJ, Wouters Y, Pascal C, Sanchette F, Dong Z |
Journal | METALLURGICAL AND MATERIALS TRANSACTIONS A-PHYSICAL METALLURGY AND MATERIALS SCIENCE |
Volume | 48A |
Pagination | 4097-4110 |
Date Published | SEP |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 1073-5623 |
Résumé | As machine tool coating specifications become increasingly stringent, the fabrication of protective titanium aluminum nitride (Ti-Al-N) films by physical vapor deposition (PVD) is progressively more demanding. Nanostructural modification through the incorporation of metal dopants can enhance coating mechanical properties. However, dopant selection and their near-atomic-scale role in performance optimization is limited. Here, yttrium was alloyed in multilayered Ti-Al-N films to tune microstructures, microchemistries, and properties, including mechanical characteristics, adhesion, wear resistance, and resilience to oxidation. By regulating processing parameters, the multilayer period (I >) and Y content could be adjusted, which, in turn, permitted tailoring of grain nucleation and secondary phase formation. With the composition fixed at x = 0.024 in (Ti0.6Al0.4)(1-x) Y (x) N and I > increased from 5.5 to 24 nm, the microstructure transformed from acicular grains with aOE (c) 111 > preferred orientation to equiaxed grains with aOE (c) 200 > texture, while the hardness (40.8 +/- 2.8 GPa to 29.7 +/- 4.9 GPa) and Young's modulus (490 +/- 47 GPa to 424 +/- 50 GPa) concomitantly deteriorated. Alternately, when I > = 5.5 nm and x in (Ti0.6Al0.4)(1-x) Y (x) N was raised from 0 to 0.024, the hardness was enhanced (28.7 +/- 7.3 GPa to 40.8 +/- 2.8 GPa) while adhesion and wear resistance were not compromised. The Ti-Al-N adopted a rock-salt type structure with Y displacing either Ti or Al and stabilizing a secondary wurtzite phase. Moreover, Y effectively retarded coating oxidation at 1073 K (800 A degrees C) in air by inhibiting grain boundary oxygen diffusion. |
DOI | 10.1007/s11661-017-4187-6 |