EVALUATION OF THE ADHESION STRENGTH IN DLC FILM-COATED SYSTEMS USING THE FILM-CRACKING TECHNIQUE

Authors
Citation
Jh. Jeong et D. Kwon, EVALUATION OF THE ADHESION STRENGTH IN DLC FILM-COATED SYSTEMS USING THE FILM-CRACKING TECHNIQUE, Journal of adhesion science and technology, 12(1), 1998, pp. 29-46
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Chemical","Material Science",Mechanics
ISSN journal
01694243
Volume
12
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
29 - 46
Database
ISI
SICI code
0169-4243(1998)12:1<29:EOTASI>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
A theoretical analysis of the adhesion dependence of film-cracking beh avior resulting from the uniaxial tensile loading of a hard film on a ductile substrate is presented. An interface shear stress that develop s due to the deformation mismatch of the film and substrate induces a normal tensile stress in the film; these stresses are analyzed as a fu nction of external strain and crack spacing, using the shear lag theor y. When the film tensile stress exceeds the film fracture strength sig ma(c), film cracking occurs at an early stage of uniaxial loading; but as the loading increases, the interface shear stress increases above the critical value tau(c) and causes the interface failure. After that , no more film cracking occurs, since stress transfer into the film is impossible due to interface damage. Thus, the interface adhesion can be estimated in terms of the shear strength from the external strain e psilon(sat) and crack spacing lambda(sat) measured at the time that fi lm cracking stops. The test results for the diamond-like carbon (DLC)/ Al system show an increase of the interface shear strength by a factor of 1.6 for 30-min Ar-plasma etching, compared with no etching. It was found that as the etching time increased, epsilon(sat) increased and lambda(sat) decreased, i.e. the interface shear strength increased. Th is strong dependence of epsilon(sat) and lambda(sat) on interface adhe sion indicates that these experimental parameters can be used as quali tative measures of the interface adhesion in a given system.