Carbon coatings produced by high temperature chlorination of silicon carbide ceramics
- 13 October 2001
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Materials Research Innovations
- Vol. 5 (2), 55-62
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s100190100136
Abstract
Carbon coatings are widely used to modify surfaces of materials and improve their tribological properties. In this work, carbon layers were formed on various types of sintered and CVD silicon carbide (SiC) using a novel technique involving a reaction with chlorine and chlorine-hydrogen gas mixtures at 1000 °C. Following the work done on powders and fibers, this method successfully produced adherent coatings on SiC ceramics, which could be grown to thickness above 200 µm. Highly disordered carbon with contributions from nanocrystalline graphite was identified by Raman spectroscopy, x-ray diffraction, and energy dispersive spectroscopy. The kinetics of the chlorination reaction at 1000 °C for different gas mixtures fit to a linear reaction rate equation. Coatings produced in pure Cl2 are graphitic and demonstrate a low hardness (1.8 GPa), Young’s modulus (18 GPa), low wear rate, and a friction coefficient of ∼0.1, which is almost constant for any testing conditions in dry or humid air. Coatings produced in Cl2/H2 mixtures have microhardness up to 50 GPa and Young’s modulus up to 800 GPa. Although the presence of hydrogen had little effect on the Raman spectrum of the carbon layers, its presence changed the structure and permeability of the carbon film.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbon with an onion-like structure obtained by chlorinating titanium carbideJournal of Materials Chemistry, 2000
- Tribological Properties of Carbon Coatings Produced by High Temperature Chlorination of Silicon CarbideTribology Transactions, 2000
- Structural study of nanoporous carbon produced from polycrystalline carbide materials: Small-angle x-ray scatteringPhysics of the Solid State, 1999
- Carbon coatings on silicon carbide by reaction with chlorine-containing gasesJournal of Materials Chemistry, 1997
- Structure of carbon produced by hydrothermal treatment of β-SiC powderJournal of Materials Chemistry, 1996
- Formation of carbon films on carbides under hydrothermal conditionsNature, 1994
- Raman spectroscopic investigation of ion-beam-irradiated glassy carbonJournal of Applied Physics, 1990
- Formation of Carbon Coatings on SiC Fibers by Selective Etching in Halogens and Supercritical WaterPublished by Wiley ,1988
- Formation and structure of polymeric carbonsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1972
- Structure of Glassy CarbonNature, 1971