Patent · US Expired

Method of forming metal, ceramic or ceramic/metal layers on inner surfaces of hollow bodies using pulsed laser deposition

US6146714A · kind A · utility

8Cited by
6References
23Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateJan 22, 1999
Grant dateNov 14, 2000
Priority date
Expiry dateJan 22, 2019

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC C)Chemistry; Metallurgy
  • CPC primaryC23C14/28
  • WIPO fieldSurface technology, coating
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

A pulsed laser deposition (PLD) process is used for forming a functional metal, ceramic, or ceramic/metal layer on an inner wall of a hollow body. Simultaneously with the deposition process, a thin-film laser treatment is carried out, whereby a laser beam impinges on the coating layer as it is being formed to achieve a rapid heating followed by a rapid cooling and solidification of the deposited coating layer. In this context, the energy and material flux densities are prescribed and controlled as a function of the spacing of the condensation region from the substrate surface. Laser pulses having an energy of 1 to 2 Joules and a pulse repetition rate of 10 to 50 Hz are used. The pulse duration as well as the residual gas atmosphere in the vacuum deposition chamber are controlled so that the generated plasma flux forms the desired layered grain structure, namely a glassy amorphous structure, a columnar structure, or a polycrystalline structure. The coating or target material can be made of a conducting material and/or an insulating material. By continuously or discretely varying process parameters, it is possible to form graded layer coating systems having properties that vary throu…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.