Preparation and properties of highly tetrahedral hydrogenated amorphous carbon

Abstract
A highly tetrahedrally bonded, hydrogenated amorphous carbon (ta-C:H) has been deposited from an acetylene-fed plasma beam source. The plasma beam source is operated to provide a highly ionized, monoenergetic plasma beam of C2 H2+ ions. The resulting films are characterized in terms of their sp3 content, mass density, intrinsic stress, surface roughness, radial distribution function, C—H bonding, Raman spectra, optical gap, electrical conductivity, gap states, Youngs modulus, and hardness. The sp3 content reaches a maximum value of 75% at an ion energy of 200 eV, or 92 eV per C ion. The density and stress also reach a maximum at this ion energy. The formation of ta-C:H is interpreted in terms of the subplantation of C+ ions, which produces a densified, sp3 bonded network. The C-H vibration spectra suggest that C sp2 sites form C=C alkene groups. The optical gap E04 reaches a maximum of 2.85 eV and increases with the sp3 fraction. The spin density due to defects is high and decreases with increasing ion energy. The Youngs modulus and hardness measured by microindenter reach maximum values of 290 and 61 GPa, consistent with the highly sp3 bonding. The variation of hardness with sp3 fraction is consistent with the constraint model of network rigidity. © 1996 The American Physical Society.

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