<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Enzlberger, L., Kirnbauer, A., Astecker, T., Wojcik, T., Podsednik, M., Limbeck, A., Kolozsvári, S., & Mayrhofer, P. H. (2025). Tuning microstructure and mechanical properties in superstoichiometric to substoichiometric TiB₂ thin films: a DCMS and HiPIMS study. <i>Surface and Coatings Technology</i>, <i>517</i>, Article 132811. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surfcoat.2025.132811</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
0257-8972
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/224725
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dc.description.abstract
Controlling the mechanical performance of TiB₂-based coatings is challenging due to the complex interplay between chemical composition, texture, microstructure, and residual stress. To decode this, we synthesized TiB2±z coatings with B/Ti ratios from 1.46 to 3.16 using non-reactive Direct Current Magnetron Sputtering (DCMS) and High-Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering (HiPIMS), varying composition systematically within each method by Ti addition (DCMS and HiPIMS) and pulse on-time (HiPIMS). This approach mostly avoided changes to the films’ morphology, allowing a focused investigation of compositional effects. B-rich coatings showed strong (0001) texture and B-rich tissue phase; both declining by decreasing the B-content, but the texturization returning at strongly substoichiometric compositions. Despite this, most coatings featured dense columnar grains ≈10 nm wide, with only TiB1.46 displaying a more homogeneous morphology. Fracture toughness from cube corner indentation varied strongly with residual stress: from ≈0.3 MPa√m (DCMS TiB₂.₁₂) to ≈5.0 MPa√m (HiPIMS TiB₂.₁₁). Cantilever bending – performed on freestanding beams that are free from deposition-induced residual macrostress – revealed consistent intrinsic toughness (≈2.5–3.5 MPa√m) across all compositions, independent of B/Ti ratio or the presence of a tissue phase. Hardness and modulus ranged from 35–40 GPa and 380–430 GPa, again dominated by stress rather than stoichiometry. HiPIMS TiB₂.₁₁ combined superhardness (40.4 GPa), high stiffness (425 GPa), and high fracture toughness (stressed and stress-less) – demonstrating that optimized HiPIMS processing enables coatings with exceptional mechanical performance.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
Elsevier
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dc.relation.ispartof
Surface and Coatings Technology
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dc.subject
Titanium Diboride
en
dc.subject
DCMS
en
dc.subject
HiPIMS
en
dc.subject
Fracture toughness
en
dc.subject
Residual stresses
en
dc.subject
Microstructure-property relation
en
dc.title
Tuning microstructure and mechanical properties in superstoichiometric to substoichiometric TiB₂ thin films: a DCMS and HiPIMS study
en
dc.type
Article
en
dc.type
Artikel
de
dc.contributor.affiliation
TU Wien, Austria
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dc.contributor.affiliation
Plansee (Germany), Germany
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dc.type.category
Original Research Article
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tuw.container.volume
517
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tuw.journal.peerreviewed
true
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tuw.peerreviewed
true
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wb.publication.intCoWork
International Co-publication
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tuw.researchinfrastructure
Röntgenzentrum
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tuw.researchinfrastructure
Universitäre Service-Einrichtung für Transmissionselektronenmikroskopie