Effect of the pulsed laser deposition conditions on the tribological properties of thin-film nanostructured coatings based on molybdenum diselenide and carbon
Abstract:
The structural state and tribological properties of gradient and composite antifriction coatings produced by pulsed laser codeposition from MoSe$_2$(Ni) and graphite targets are studied. The coatings are deposited onto steel substrates in vacuum and an inert gas, and an antidrop shield is used to prevent the deposition of micron-size particles from a laser jet onto the coating. The deposition of a laser jet from the graphite target and the application of a negative potential to the substrate ensure additional high-energy atom bombardment of growing coatings. Comparative tribological tests performed at a relative air humidity of $\sim$50% demonstrate that the “drop-free” deposition of a laser-induced atomic flux in the shield shadow significantly improves the antifriction properties of MoSe$_x$ coatings, decreasing the friction coefficient from 0.07 to 0.04. The best tribological properties, which combine a low friction coefficient and high wear resistance, are detected in drop-free MoSe$_x$ coatings additionally alloyed with carbon (up to $\sim$55 at%) and subjected to effective bombardment by high-energy atoms during growth. Under these conditions, a dense nanocomposite structure containing the self-lubricating MoSe$_2$ phase and an amorphous carbon phase with a rather high concentration of diamond bonds forms.