Abstract :
Surface treatment by means of pulsed laser beams in reactive atmospheres is an attractive technique to enhance the surface
features, such as corrosion, wear resistances and hardness. Among all laser types, the free-electron laser (FEL) is relatively new
for materials processing, its main peculiarity being the versatile pulse structure, with high repetition rates (the so-called
macropulse). We have employed the FEL at the Jefferson Lab (Virginia, USA) to irradiate pure titanium substrates in nitrogen
atmosphere. The influence of various experimental parameters (macropulse duration, spot overlap and laser fluence) on the
nitrogen incorporation and the resulting microstructures has been investigated. It will be shown that the laser treatment is not
only a successful way to form titanium nitride, but also that a proper set of the experimental parameters can efficiently control the
growth mechanism and the crystallographic texture of the resulting nitride phase, leading to the synthesis of highly oriented d-
TiN(2 0 0) layers. As it will be shown, the surface features strongly depends on the irradiation conditions: in particular a very
smooth, crack-free surface can be obtained with small spot overlap and long macropulses (1000 ms), while the roughness
increases with large overlap and short macropulses (<250 ms). Accordingly, the degree of crystallographic texture is higher in
the samples with the smother surface. Although the nitrogen content at the surface is rather independent of the irradiation
conditions (being always close to 50 at.%), the hardness profiles of the TiN coating is influenced by the laser spot overlap and
consequently by nitrogen gradient.
Keywords :
Titanium nitride , Free-electron laser , Laser nitriding , Titanium