Magnetron sputtering of carbon supersaturated tungsten films – A chemical approach to increase strength

S. Fritze; M. Chen; L. Riekehr; B. Osinger; M. A. Sortica; A. Srinath; A. S. Menon; E. Lewin; D. Primetzhofer; J. M. Wheeler; U. Jansson

Materials and Design 208 (2021) 109874-109874

Tungsten (W)-based materials attract significant attention due to their superior mechanical properties. Here, we present a chemical approach based on the addition of carbon (C) for increased strength via the combination of three strengthening mechanisms in W thin films. W:C thin films with C concentrations up to ~4 at.% were deposited by magnetron sputtering. All films exhibit a body-centred-cubic structure with strong texture and columnar growth behaviour. X-ray and electron diffraction measurements suggest the formation of supersaturated W:C solid solution phases. The addition of C reduced the average column width from ~133 nm for W to ~20 nm for the film containing ~4 at.% C. The column refinement is explained by a mechanism where C acts as re-nucleation sites. The W film is ~13 GPa hard, while the W:C films achieve a peak hardness of ~24 GPa. The W:C films are ~11 GPa harder than the W film, which is explained by a combination of grain refinement strengthening, solid solution strengthening and increased dislocation density. Additional micropillar compression tests showed that the flow stress increased upon C addition, from ~3.8 to ~8.3 GPa and no brittle fracture was observed.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matdes.2021.109874