Characterization of MoS 2 films via simultaneous grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and grazing incidence X-ray fluorescence (GIXRD/GIXRF)

Physical vapor deposited (PVD) molybdenum disulfide (nominal composition MoS 2 ) is employed as a thin film solid lubricant for extreme environments where liquid lubricants are not viable. The tribological properties of MoS 2 are highly dependent on morphological attributes such as film thickness, o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Powder diffraction 2024-06, Vol.39 (2), p.60-68
Hauptverfasser: Rodriguez, Mark A., Babuska, Tomas F., Curry, John, Griego, James J. M., Dugger, Mike T., Larson, Steven R., Mings, Alex
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Physical vapor deposited (PVD) molybdenum disulfide (nominal composition MoS 2 ) is employed as a thin film solid lubricant for extreme environments where liquid lubricants are not viable. The tribological properties of MoS 2 are highly dependent on morphological attributes such as film thickness, orientation, crystallinity, film density, and stoichiometry. These structural characteristics are controlled by tuning the PVD process parameters, yet undesirable alterations in the structure often occur due to process variations between deposition runs. Nondestructive film diagnostics can enable improved yield and serve as a means of tuning a deposition process, thus enabling quality control and materials exploration. Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) for MoS 2 film characterization provides valuable information about film density and grain orientation (texture). However, the determination of film stoichiometry can only be indirectly inferred via GIXRD. The combination of density and microstructure via GIXRD with chemical composition via grazing incidence X-ray fluorescence (GIXRF) enables the isolation and decoupling of film density, composition, and microstructure and their ultimate impact on film layer thickness, thereby improving coating thickness predictions via X-ray fluorescence. We have augmented an existing GIXRD instrument with an additional X-ray detector for the simultaneous measurement of energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectra during the GIXRD analysis. This combined GIXRD/GIXRF analysis has proven synergetic for correlating chemical composition to the structural aspects of MoS 2 films provided by GIXRD. We present the usefulness of the combined diagnostic technique via exemplar MoS 2 film samples and provide a discussion regarding data extraction techniques of grazing angle series measurements.
ISSN:0885-7156
1945-7413
DOI:10.1017/S0885715624000319