Metal Immiscibility Route to Synthesis of Ultrathin Carbides, Borides, and Nitrides

ZX Wang and V Kochat and P Pandey and S Kashyap and S Chattopadhyay and A Samanta and S Sarkar and P Manimunda and X Zhang and S Asif and AK Singh and K Chattopadhyay and CS Tiwary and PM Ajayan, ADVANCED MATERIALS, 29, 1700364 (2017).

DOI: 10.1002/adma.201700364

Ultrathin ceramic coatings are of high interest as protective coatings from aviation to biomedical applications. Here, a generic approach of making scalable ultrathin transition metal-carbide/boride/nitride using immiscibility of two metals is demonstrated. Ultrathin tantalum carbide, nitride, and boride are grown using chemical vapor deposition by heating a tantalum-copper bilayer with corresponding precursor (C2H2, B powder, and NH3). The ultrathin crystals are found on the copper surface (opposite of the metal-metal junction). A detailed microscopy analysis followed by density functional theory based calculation demonstrates the migration mechanism, where Ta atoms prefer to stay in clusters in the Cu matrix. These ultrathin materials have good interface attachment with Cu, improving the scratch resistance and oxidation resistance of Cu. This metal-metal immiscibility system can be extended to other metals to synthesize metal carbide, boride, and nitride coatings.

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