Extraordinary oxidation behavior of W-Zr thin-film metallic glasses: A route for tailoring functional properties of W-Zr-O films
The oxidation behavior of W-Zr thin-film metallic glasses (TFMGs) with 32, 48 and 61 at.% Zr, prepared by dc magnetron co-sputtering, was comprehensively studied after annealing in synthetic air. The study focuses on the effect of the annealing temperature (up to 600{\deg}C) on the oxidation process...
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Zusammenfassung: | The oxidation behavior of W-Zr thin-film metallic glasses (TFMGs) with 32, 48
and 61 at.% Zr, prepared by dc magnetron co-sputtering, was comprehensively
studied after annealing in synthetic air. The study focuses on the effect of
the annealing temperature (up to 600{\deg}C) on the oxidation process, oxygen
saturation, structure evolution, and their subsequent impact on electrical,
optical and mechanical properties. The findings reveal that controlled
oxidation transforms W-Zr TFMGs into amorphous ceramic W-Zr-O films with
substoichiometric compositions. This is a consequence of an oxidation process
that does not proceed through the formation of a stoichiometric oxide layer on
the surface of W-Zr TFMGs, acting as a diffusion barrier against fast
oxidation, but leads to a gradual incorporation of oxygen across the film
volume due to thermodynamics factors. Higher Zr content accelerates the oxygen
incorporation and its depth uniformity in the films. As a result, the
mechanical properties are significantly enhanced achieving hardness values of
up to 17.5 GPa at approximately 50% oxygen saturation. Simultaneously, the
electrical and optical properties are finely tuned with the resistivity and the
extinction coefficient (measured at 550 nm) ranging from 1.7 to 95.7x10-4
Ohm.cm and 0.28 to 1.06, respectively. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.15943 |