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2006 | Book

Nanostructured Coatings

Editors: Albano Cavaleiro, Jeff Th. M. De Hosson

Publisher: Springer New York

Book Series : Nanostructure Science and Technology

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About this book

Controlling the performance of structures and components of all sizes and shapes through the use of engineered coatings has long been a key strategy in materials processing and technological design. The ever-increasing sophistication of en- neered coatings and the rapid trend toward producing increasingly smaller devices with greater demands on their fabrication, properties and performance have led to signi?cant progress in the science and technology of coatings, particularly in the last decade or two. Nanostructured coatings constitute a major area of sci- ti?c exploration and technological pursuit in this development. Withcharacteristic structural length scales on the order of a few nanometers to tens of nanometers, nanostructured coatings provide potential opportunities to enhance dramatically performance by offering, in many situations, extraordinary strength and hardness, unprecedented resistance to damage from tribological contact, and improvements in a number of functional properties. At the same time, there are critical issues and challenges in optimizing these properties with ?aw tolerance, interfacial adhesion and other nonmechanical considerations, depending on the coating systems and applications. Nanostructured coatings demand study in a highly interdisciplinary research arena which encompasses: surface and interface science study of defects modern characterization methodologies cutting-edge experimental developments to deposit,synthesize, conso- date, observe as well as chemically and mechanically probe materials at the atomic and molecular length scales state-of-the-art computational simulation techniques for developing - sightsintomaterialbehaviourattheatomicscalewhichcannotbeobtained in some cases from experiments alone The interdisclipinary nature of the subject has made it a rich playing ?eld for scienti?c innovation and technological progress.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
1. Galileo Comes to the Surface!
Jeff T. M. De Hosson, Albano Cavaleiro
2. Size Effects on Deformation and Fracture of Nanostructured Metals
Benedikt Moser, Ruth Schwaiger, Ming Dao
3. Defects and Deformation Mechanisms in Nanostructured Coatings
Ilya A. Ovid’ko
4. Nanoindentation in Nanocrystalline Metallic Layers: A Molecular Dynamics Study on Size Effects
Helena Van Swygenhoven, Abdellatif Hasnaoui, Peter M. Derlet
5. Electron Microscopy Characterization of Nanostructured Coatings
Jeff Th. M. De Hosson, Nuno J. M. Carvalho, Yutao Pei, Damiano Galvan
6. Measurement of Hardness and Young’s Modulus by Nanoindentation
Thomas Chudoba
7. The Influence of the Addition of a Third Element on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Transition-Metal-Based Nanostructured Hard Films: Part I—Nitrides
Albano Cavaleiro, Bruno Trindade, Maria Teresa Vieira
8. The Influence of the Addition of a Third Element on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Transition-Metal-Based Nanostructured Hard Films: Part II—Carbides
Bruno Trindade, Albano Cavaleiro, Maria Teresa Vieira
9. Concept for the Design of Superhard Nanocomposites with High Thermal Stability: Their Preparation, Properties, and Industrial Applications
Stan Veprek, Maritza G. J. Veprek-Heijman
10. Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hard Nanocomposite Films Prepared by Reactive Magnetron Sputtering
J. Musil
11. Thermal Stability of Advanced Nanostructured Wear-Resistant Coatings
Lars Hultman, Christian Mitterer
12. Optimization of Nanostructured Tribological Coatings
7. Summary
This chapter has illustrated the importance of optimizing the ratio between hardness and elastic modulus (H/E) when developing coatings for wear resistance applications. It has been shown that nanocomposite coatings offer specific attractions in this regard. Metal-metal nanocomposites in particular are promising, because of not only their mechanical and tribological behavior, but also their corrosion properties and potential to compete cost-effectively with traditional coatings in terms of achievable thicknesses and deposition rates. Finally, we have discussed how nanocomposite tribological coatings lend themselves to the goal of incorporating “adaptive” and “chameleon-like” attributes to permit self-optimization of performance during operation, particularly for extreme high-temperature applications— and in other severe environments.
Adrian Leyland, Allan Matthews
13. Synthesis, Structure, and Properties of Superhard Superlattice Coatings
Lars Hultman
14. Synthesis, Structure, and Applications of Nanoscale Multilayer/Superlattice Structured PVD Coatings
P. Eh. Hovsepian, W. -D. Münz
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Nanostructured Coatings
Editors
Albano Cavaleiro
Jeff Th. M. De Hosson
Copyright Year
2006
Publisher
Springer New York
Electronic ISBN
978-0-387-48756-4
Print ISBN
978-0-387-25642-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-48756-4

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