Journal of Aerosol Science, Vol.29, No.5, 707-720, 1998
Hypersonic plasma particle deposition of nanostructured silicon and silicon carbide
A new process for the production of nanostructured materials, hypersonic plasma particle deposition (HPPD), is experimentally investigated. In HPPD, vapor phase precursors are injected into a flowing plasma generated by a DC arc. The plasma under goes a supersonic expansion into a deposition chamber, with the pressure dropping across the nozzle from similar to 5000 Torr to similar to 2 Torr; Ultrafine particles nucleate in the nozzle, accelerate in the hypersonic free jet downstream of the nozzle, and deposit by inertial impaction onto a temperature-controlled substrate. The low particle residence time (similar to 50 mu s) minimizes particle agglomeration, while the high particle deposition velocity (similar to 1 km s(-1)) results in the formation of a partially consolidated coating. We have characterized silicon, carbon and silicon carbide coatings produced by injecting vapor-phase SiCl4 and hydrocarbon (CH4 and C2H2) precursors into an Ar-H-2 plasma. The silicon coatings are polycrystalline, while the carbon and silicon carbide deposits are amorphous and hydrogenated. Both Si and SiC coatings had nanostructured regions with grain sizes on the order of 20-30 nm, reasonably close to the diameters of impacting particles measured using an extractive aerosol probe coupled to a scanning electrical mobility analyzer.