The self-repairing of ion irradiation damaged Mo-S-Ti (MoST) lubricant films by thermal annealing

Zewen Duan, Haixia Jiang, Li Qiao, Liqiang Chai, Peng Wang, Xiaoyu Zhao, Weimin Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mo-S-Ti composite films deposited by magnetron sputtering were irradiated by 2 MeV Au2+ with a high fluence of 3.3 × 1015 ion cm-2. Upon intense bombardment by 2 MeV Au2+, the Mo-S-Ti thin film exhibits sensitivity to radiation-induced amorphization at room temperature. Afterwards, thermal annealing experiments on the irradiated thin films were conducted over the temperature range of 200 °C-900 °C. Subsequent annealing experiments found that the effect of heavy ion irradiation on Mo-S-Ti films was a reversible reaction, with the irradiation-damaged MoS2 lattice being completely self-repaired by thermal annealing. In the annealing temperature range of 200 °C-600 °C, no evidence of an amorphous to recrystallized transition was observed. When the temperature was increased to as high as 700 °C, the damaged MoS2 molecules were well recrystallized. HRTEM images of irradiated samples annealed at 700 °C strikingly found that the self-repaired MoS2 crystallites preserving long range ordering were still rearranged in an intrinsic (0 0 2) crystal orientation. MoS2 nanocrystals that survived the ion bombardment step may provide some nucleus for subsequent MoS2 grains growing dominantly in the (0 0 2) direction in thermal annealing. Compared with the difficult recrystallization in thermal annealing, the irradiation-amorphized MoS2 phases were easily self-repaired under friction. The low transition potential barrier from irradiation-induced amorphization to crystallization, achieved by mechanical working, may be an important reason for the quick recrystallization.

Original languageEnglish
Article number155202
JournalJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Volume53
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Feb 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Ion irradiation
  • Mo-S-Ti thin film
  • Recrystallization
  • Self-repairing
  • Thermal annealing

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