861 research outputs found
Nitriding of titanium and its alloys by N2, NH3 or mixtures of N2 + H2 in a dc arc plasma at low pressures ( or = to torr)
The dc glow discharges in different gas mixtures of Ar + N2, Ar + NH3 or Ar + N2 + H2 result in the surface nitriding of Ti metal and its alloy (Ti6Al4V). Various gas mixtures were used in order to establish the main active species governing the nitriding process, i.e., N, N2, NH, or NH2 as excited or ionized particles. The dc discharge was sampled and analyzed by quadruple mass spectrometry (QPMS) and optical emission spectroscopy (OES), and the nitrided samples were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with an EDAX attachment, microhardness, and Fourier transform infrared reflectance spectrometry (FTIR). It was found that the excited and ionized nitrogen and hydrogen atoms are the main species responsible for the nitriding process in a dc glow discharge
Analysis of glow discharges for understanding the process of film formation
The physical and chemical processes which occur during the formation of different types of films in a variety of glow discharge plasmas are discussed. Emphasis is placed on plasma diagnostic experiments using spectroscopic methods, probe analysis, mass spectrometric sampling and magnetic resonance techniques which are well suited to investigate the neutral and ionized gas phase species as well as some aspects of plasma surface interactions. The results on metallic, semi-conducting and insulating films are reviewed in conjunction with proposed models and the problem encountered under film deposition conditions. It is concluded that the understanding of film deposition process requires additional experimental information on plasma surface interactions of free radicals and the synergetic effects where photon, electron and ion bombardment change the reactivity of the incident radical with the surface
Plasma variables and tribological properties of coatings in low pressure (0.1 - 10.0 torr) plasma systems
A detailed treatment is presented of the dialog known as plasma surface interactions (PSI) with respect to the coating process and its tribological behavior. Adsorption, morphological changes, defect formation, sputtering, chemical etching, and secondary electron emission are all discussed as promoting and enhancing the surface chemistry, thus influencing the tribological properties of the deposited flux. Phenomenological correlations of rate of deposition, flux composition, microhardness, and wear with the plasma layer variables give an insight to the formation of chemical bonding between the deposited flux and the substrate surface
Dimensionality and design of isotropic interactions that stabilize honeycomb, square, simple cubic, and diamond lattices
We use inverse methods of statistical mechanics and computer simulations to
investigate whether an isotropic interaction designed to stabilize a given
two-dimensional (2D) lattice will also favor an analogous three-dimensional
(3D) structure, and vice versa. Specifically, we determine the 3D ordered
lattices favored by isotropic potentials optimized to exhibit stable 2D
honeycomb (or square) periodic structures, as well as the 2D ordered structures
favored by isotropic interactions designed to stabilize 3D diamond (or simple
cubic) lattices. We find a remarkable `transferability' of isotropic potentials
designed to stabilize analogous morphologies in 2D and 3D, irrespective of the
exact interaction form, and we discuss the basis of this cross-dimensional
behavior. Our results suggest that the discovery of interactions that drive
assembly into certain 3D periodic structures of interest can be assisted by
less computationally intensive optimizations targeting the analogous 2D
lattices.Comment: 22 pages (preprint version; includes supplementary information), 5
figures, 3 table
Radical and ion molecule mechanisms in the polymerization of hydrocarbons and chlorosilanes in RF plasmas at low pressures ( 1.0 torr)
The ion-molecule and the radical-molecule mechanisms are responsible for the dissociation of hydrocarbons, and chlorosilane monomers and the formation of polymerized species, respectively, in the plasma state of a RF discharge. In the plasma, of a mixture of monomer with Ar, the rate determining step for both dissociation and polymerization is governed by an ion-molecular type interaction. Additions of H2 or NH3 to the monomer Ar(+) mixture transforms the rate determining step from an ion-molecular interaction to a radical-molecule type interaction for both monomer dissociation and polymerization processes
Fine-Grain Checkpointing with In-Cache-Line Logging
Non-Volatile Memory offers the possibility of implementing high-performance,
durable data structures. However, achieving performance comparable to
well-designed data structures in non-persistent (transient) memory is
difficult, primarily because of the cost of ensuring the order in which memory
writes reach NVM. Often, this requires flushing data to NVM and waiting a full
memory round-trip time.
In this paper, we introduce two new techniques: Fine-Grained Checkpointing,
which ensures a consistent, quickly recoverable data structure in NVM after a
system failure, and In-Cache-Line Logging, an undo-logging technique that
enables recovery of earlier state without requiring cache-line flushes in the
normal case. We implemented these techniques in the Masstree data structure,
making it persistent and demonstrating the ease of applying them to a highly
optimized system and their low (5.9-15.4\%) runtime overhead cost.Comment: In 2019 Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating
Systems (ASPLOS 19), April 13, 2019, Providence, RI, US
Homogeneous reactions of hydrocarbons, silane, and chlorosilanes in radiofrequency plasmas at low pressures
The ion-molecule and radical-molecule mechanisms are responsible for the dissociation of hydrocarbon, silane, and chlorosilane monomers and the formation of polymerized species, respectively, in an RF plasma discharge. In a plasma containing a mixture of monomer and argon the rate-determining step for both dissociation and polymerization is governed by an ion-molecule type of interaction. Adding hydrogen or ammonia to the monomer-argon mixture transforms the rate-determining step from an ion-molecule interaction to a radical-molecule interaction for both monomer dissociation and polymerization
Correlations between plasma variables and the deposition process of Si films from chlorosilanes in low pressure RF plasma of argon and hydrogen
The dissociation of chlorosilanes to silicon and its deposition on a solid substrate in a RF plasma of mixtures of argon and hydrogen were investigated as a function of the macrovariables of the plasma. The dissociation mechanism of chlorosilanes and HCl as well as the formation of Si in the plasma state were studied by sampling the plasma with a quadrupole mass spectrometer. Macrovariables such as pressure, net RF power input and locations in the plasma reactor strongly influence the kinetics of dissociation. The deposition process of microcrystalline silicon films and its chlorine contamination were correlated to the dissociation mechanism of chlorosilanes and HCl
- …