B.A. Hutchins, T.N. Rhodin, et al.
Surface Science
Amorphous hydrogenated carbon (a-C) exhibits outstanding properties such as high hardness, low mechanical wear and friction, high thermal conductivity, etc. These properties are irreversibly altered above 400 °C. Doping the a-C films with nitrogen revealed the possibility to continuously tune properties such as internal stress, hardness, electrical conductivity and surface energy. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy has been used to analyze the chemical and structural modifications caused by the introduction of nitrogen into the films. An increased onset temperature of the thermal C-H bond decomposition in a-C films up to 600 °C (in vacuum) is observed. Hardness measurements on N-doped samples show an increase in thermal stability of the films, however, without ever reaching the hardness values obtained from the undoped a-C film. © 1995.
B.A. Hutchins, T.N. Rhodin, et al.
Surface Science
E. Babich, J. Paraszczak, et al.
Microelectronic Engineering
I. Morgenstern, K.A. Müller, et al.
Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter
A. Gupta, R. Gross, et al.
SPIE Advances in Semiconductors and Superconductors 1990