Title of article :
Effect of continuous and cyclic Rf plasma processing
time on titanium surface
Author/Authors :
F.M. El-Hossary، نويسنده , , N.Z. Negm، نويسنده , , S.M. Khalil، نويسنده , , M. Raaif، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
A systematic study was undertaken with surface of titanium nitrided by Rf inductively coupled plasma. The continuous plasma
processing time was changed from only 3 to 40 min in steps of 5 min or less. The other plasma parameters were fixed. The effect
of cyclic plasma processing time on titanium sample was investigated too. The single period of plasma processing was adjusted to
be 25 min and the nitriding process was repeated twice, triplet, and quadruple. X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical micrograph (OM),
and Vickers microhardness (HV) were employed as analytical techniques. The results clearly show that the surface hardness and
nitriding rate increase incessantly as the continuous plasma processing time increases to reach the maximum values of 2150
HV0.1 at 40 min and 3.38 mm2/s at 30 min, respectively. This behaviormay be attributed to formation of new hard phases a-Ti(N),
d-TiN, and e-Ti2N in the treated layer. In this interval, the active nitrogen species penetrate faster through surface grain boundaries
and through the formed surface microcraks of titanium sample. For relatively long nitriding time more than 30 min of continuous
plasma processing, the rate of nitriding decreases. The formed nitrided phases might block the previously formed microcracks in
the treated layer. Therefore, the penetration of nitrogen species rate through these microcracks decreases and the rate of nitriding
process decreases consequently. Using cyclic nitriding method yielded an increase in the microhardness of titanium sample to be
2650 HV0.1 with relatively high rate of nitriding. These investigations show that the short Rf plasma processing time treatment
and cyclic nitriding method play an important role for producing hard surface titanium with high rate of nitriding.
Keywords :
Titanium , Short processing time , cyclic time , RF plasma , Microhardness , X-ray diffraction , OM , Nitriding rate
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science