The invention relates to a method and an apparatus for multi-cathode PVD coating of substrates.
Cathode sputtering has become increasingly important in the field of PVD coating. Both the wide range of materials and the reproducibility of the coating process have contributed to this development. In addition to monolithically formed layer structures, multiple layer architectures have become more important in the last decade. Particularly in the field of nano-scaled multiple layers and so-called superlattices, excellent layer characteristics are achieved with respect to wear resistance, oxidation resistance and corrosion resistance.
In particular, it has been possible to considerably increase the hardness of the condensed nanocrystalline layers, specifically up to about 50% of diamond hardness, that is to say up to about 50 GPa [1].
In general, these novel super hard layers have enormous compressive stresses, to be precise up to more than −7 GPa. For this reason, the adhesive strength of the condensed layers on the substrates, which are normally composed of steel, hard metal or materials prepared in advance by means of electrochemical layers, is of major importance.
During the course of development of cathode sputtering, it has been found that the adhesive strength of super hard layer systems such as these is limited if the substrates have been pretreated only with argon ions as in-vacuo cleaning.
In addition to multilayer intermediate layers whose production processes are complex, mechanical pre-treatments [2] are also carried out in order to reduce the compressive stress gradient between the relatively soft substrate and the PVD layer.
Metal-ion pre-treatment before the actual coating process reduces the compressive stresses. This method has been developed by means of cathodic arc discharge [3] for coating technology purposes.
A plasma which contains a high concentration of metal ions with one or more charges is formed in a cathodic arc discharge [4 ].
Basic experiments have shown [5, 6] that the combined pre-treatment of the substrates with metal ions from a cathodic arc discharge results in subsequent layers, which are deposited with an unbalanced magnetron (UBM), having point epitaxial layer growth which results in increased adhesion of the layers [7].
Empirically, this relationship has been known for a relatively long time [8, 9, 10] and is used industrially in the so-called arc bond sputter process [11]. This method has the disadvantage that the macroparticles which are typical of cathodic arc discharges, so-called droplets [12], are created during the metal-ion pre-treatment and lead to undesirable inhomogeneities in the layer. Inhomogeneities such as these also disadvantageously influence the subsequent coating process, which is droplet-free per se, by means of UBM [13].
EP 1260603 A2 discloses a PVD method for coating substrates, in which the substrate is pretreated in the plasma of a pulsed magnetic-field-assisted cathode sputtering process (HIPIMS). A magnetron cathode is used to assist the magnetic field during the pre-treatment. After the pre-treatment, a further coating is produced, for example by means of UBM cathode sputtering. Identical cathodes and identical magnetic-field arrangements are used for the pre-treatment and the coating.
EP 0521045 B1 discloses a method for ion plating using a first and a second magnetron, each of which has an inner pole and an outer annular pole of opposite polarity. The magnetrons are arranged such that the outer annular pole of one magnetron and the outer annular pole of the second or further magnetron are arranged adjacent to the respective other one, and are of opposite polarity. One of the magnetrons is operated in the unbalanced state.
WO 98/40532 discloses a method and an apparatus with magnetically assisted cathode sputtering, with the cathode being operated using high-power pulses (HIPIMS).
The object of the present invention is to provide a method and an apparatus for PVD coating of substrates, in which the occurrence of macroparticles, which lead to undesirable inhomogeneities in the coating, is largely avoided and high-hardness multiple layers with good adhesion on the substrate are produced.
According to the method, this object is achieved by the following steps:
In an improvement of the method, step (a) is carried out with a cathode target composed of metal in a gas atmosphere at a pressure of less than or equal to 1·10−2 mbar and with a substrate potential of −500 to −2000 V, with the substrate surface being etched and implanted with metal ions that have been positively charged one or more times.
A further refinement of the method results from Patent claims 3 to 15.
The apparatus according to the invention for multi-cathode PVD coating is equipped with one or more process chambers, with each process chamber having at least one HIPIMS cathode and at least one UBM cathode.
A further refinement of the apparatus results from Patent claims 17 to 20.
The substrate according to the invention with PVD coating comprises an implantation layer, which is produced by HIPIMS in the substrate surface, and one or more double layers, which are deposited by means of UBM and HIPIMS.
The development of the substrate is described in Patent claims 22 to 30.
The invention achieves the advantage that the metal-ion etching during the pre-treatment is carried out by means of HIPIMS, therefore greatly reducing the creation of macroparticles. The multiple layer architecture is formed by simultaneous use of UBM and HIPIMS.
The specific HIPIMS cathode sputtering method was initially used solely for deposition of PVD layers [14]. However, consideration of HIPIMS for metal-ion etching as a substrate pre-treatment strictly combined with subsequent coating exclusively using the unbalanced magnetron was first demonstrated briefly [17]. However, in this method, the UBM and HIPIMS cathodes are not operated simultaneously.
The invention will be explained in more detail in the following text with reference to the drawings, in which:
The method is distinguished in that a plasma is produced and in that, in a similar manner to that with the cathodic arc discharge, metal ions that are multiple charged are generated, but no macroparticles (droplets) are produced.
Metal-ion etching is carried out before coating using the HIPIMS method. Furthermore, however, the HIPIMS method is used simultaneously with the unbalanced magnetron (UBM) for coating.
The invention does not just consist in the simultaneous use of the two procedures during coating but also in the fact that the coating materials for HIPIMS and UBM are fundamentally different. For example, materials such as Ti, Cr, Zr, V, Nb, Mo, Ta, W or Al are used for pre-treatment in the HIPIMS method. During the coating process, these materials are deposited as nitrides, carbides, carbon-nitrides, oxides or oxynitrides. With UBM, materials are deposited which are not identical to the materials deposited with the HIPIMS. For example, while CrN can be deposited with HIPIMS, TiNx or, for example, NbN is deposited simultaneously with the UBM. This results in layer systems with layers of the type shown in
UBM can also be used to sputter multi-component materials such as TiAl, TiAlY, CrAl, ZrAl or pure graphite, so that layer sequences such as CrN/TiAlN or TiN/CrAlN or W/C are created. One particularly preferred deposition condition is the production of layers based on the superlattice architecture [1, 18]. In this case, the coating parameters must be chosen such that the thickness of the double layer, for example VN/TiAlN, is approximately 3-5 nm.
In order to produce these novel layers, specific cathode arrangements are required in the PVD systems to be used.
The first embodiment of a process chamber 6, illustrated in
Once the system has been loaded, the chamber door is closed and the chamber pressure is reduced from atmospheric pressure to a pressure of <5·10−5 mbar by pumping out the vacuum chamber. Argon is then let into the chamber until a pressure of 2·10−3 mbar is reached.
The HIPIMS cathode 9 is equipped with a solenoid electromagnet 11. The UBM cathode 10 is likewise equipped with a solenoid electromagnet 12.
A tungsten implantation layer is produced by operation of the HIPIMS cathode 9 with simultaneous application of a substrate potential of −1000 V, by means of a combined ion-etching process and coating process.
Argon and acetylene are then introduced into the process chamber, and a pressure of 5·10−3 mbar is set. At the same time, the negative substrate potential is reduced to −100 V, and the UBM cathode 10 is switched on.
A multiple double-layer structure composed of W/C, as shown in
The second embodiment of a process chamber 15, shown in
The HIPIMS cathode 9 is equipped with a solenoid electromagnet 11, and the two UBM cathodes 10, 13 are equipped with solenoid electromagnets 12, 14.
Once the inlet/outlet charging chamber of the system has been loaded, the chamber door is closed and the chamber pressure is reduced from atmospheric pressure to a pressure of <5·10−5 mbar by pumping out the vacuum chamber. The openings which are located between a central chamber and the process chambers are in this case closed by sealing plates. All the sealing plates, which are also fitted with the brackets, on which the substrate supports 8 are inserted, are then opened via a central drive mechanism which is located in the central chamber, and the substrate supports are moved into the central chamber, are then positioned in front of the next process chamber by a 90° rotary movement, and are then moved into this chamber. When the substrate support reaches the final position in the process chamber accommodating it, the connection of the process chamber to the central chamber is once again closed at the same time, by means of the sealing plates.
The cathode arrangement described above is located in the process chamber adjacent to the inlet/outlet charging chamber. Only argon is introduced into this process chamber, until a pressure of 3·10−3 mbar is reached.
A titanium implantation layer is produced by operation of the HIPIMS cathode 9 with simultaneous application of a substrate potential of −1100 V, by means of a simultaneous ion-etching process and coating process.
Argon and acetylene are then introduced, and a pressure of 4·10−3 mbar is set. At the same time, the negative substrate potential is reduced to −80 V, and the two UBM cathodes 10, 13 are switched on.
A multilayer coating with TiC/C is applied, with the layer architecture shown in
This layer has a coefficient of friction μ of less than 0.2.
The third embodiment of a process chamber 20 shown in
The HIPIMS cathodes 9, 16 are equipped with solenoid electromagnets 11, 17, and the two UBM cathodes 13, 18 are equipped with solenoid electromagnets 14, 19.
Once the system has been loaded, the chamber door is closed and the chamber pressure is reduced from atmospheric pressure to a pressure of <3·10−5 mbar by pumping out the vacuum chamber. Argon is then introduced into the chamber until a pressure of 2.5·10−3 mbar is reached.
An ion-etching process and a coating process are carried out simultaneously by operation of the HIPIMS cathodes 9, 16 with a substrate potential of −1200 V being applied at the same time, resulting in the production of a chromium implantation layer.
Argon and nitrogen are then introduced, and a pressure of 7·10−3 mbar is set. At the same time, the negative substrate potential is reduced to −75 V, and the two UBM cathodes 13, 18 are additionally switched on.
A multilayer coating composed of CrN/TiAlN with a double-layer structure as shown in
In order to optimize the hardness of the resultant layers, the aim is to produce a layer thickness of 3 to 4 nm of the CrN/TiAlN double layers. The resultant layer hardness is about 48 GPa.
The PVD coating is carried out using materials as shown in the following table:
The invention provides a method for operation of a multi-cathode PVD coating process, based on the HIPIMS and UBM cathode sputtering variants. The cathodes are operated in the HIPIMS mode for substrate pre-treatment, while the coating is carried out by operating the cathodes simultaneously in the HIPIMS mode and in the UBM mode.
In this case, different target materials are preferably used in the HIPIMS mode and in the UBM mode.
The layer thicknesses of the material double layers are preferably in the range of 3 to 5 nm, and the superlattice effect occurs for super hard layers, with a plastic hardness of >40 GPa.
The distance between the individual cathode and the substrates is not more than 75 cm.
The magnetic fields of the individual cathodes are largely magnetically coupled by means of the solenoid electromagnets.
By means of the solenoid electromagnets with which the cathodes are equipped the unbalance effect is being produced in the cathode plasma The magnetron cathodes are equipped with balanced permanent magnets. By way of example, the permanent magnet materials are NdFeB or SmCo.
The magnetic-field-assisted high-power impulse magnetron cathode sputtering (HIPIMS) is carried out in the following discharge conditions. The pulses which are supplied to the target that is mounted on the HIPIMS cathode typically have power densities of 800 to 3000 WCm−2, with pulse lengths of 50 to 250 μs and pulse intervals of 20 to 200 ms. The peak voltages could be up to −1200 V. The mean power density is kept in the region of 10 Wcm−2. In consequence, the mean power density of HIPIMS is comparable to the power density for direct-current UBM, which is likewise around 8 to 10 Wcm−2.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 102005033769.4 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP2006/006768 | 7/11/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/28/2008 |