Papers by Author: A.J.S. Fernandes

Paper TitlePage

Abstract: Nano/microstructures of zinc oxide (ZnO) were grown by the laser assisted flow deposition (LAFD) method. This new process has proved to be very efficient, allowing high yield ZnO deposits at high-rate applicable to large-scale substrates. Laser local heating promotes fast ZnO decomposition and recombination under a self-catalytic vapour–liquid-solid mechanism for the nucleation and growth. Three types of ZnO morphologies were obtained according to the temperature/oxygen availability inside the growth chamber. The morphology can also be controlled adding rare-earth elements to the initial composition. Particularly, tetrapod morphology was obtained by europium oxide addition to the precursors. The structural and microstructural characterizations confirm the good crystallinity of the wurtzite structure. The photoluminescence spectroscopy revealed high optical quality of the as-grown ZnO. Specifically, the free exciton recombination and a strong near band edge recombination due to donor bound exciton transitions can be clearly recognized, although deep level emission in the green spectral region is present.
129
Abstract: In-situ measurements of acoustic emission (AE) in self-mated tribological pairs of CVD diamond coated silicon nitride (Si3N4) were made with the purpose of investigating the relationship between AE signal and friction events. A good correlation is found between the energy dissipation/emission processes, therefore enabling the possibility of monitoring the different friction regimes occurring during the sliding contact of microcrystalline diamond (MCD) coatings. Deposition of MCD on flat and ball-shaped Si3N4 samples was accomplished using microwave plasma assisted chemical vapour deposition (MPCVD) with H2/CH4 gas mixtures. The friction behaviour of self-mated MCD coatings was assessed using a reciprocating ball-on-flat geometry. The tests were run in ambient atmosphere without lubrication, the frequency (1Hz) and stroke (6mm) were kept constant while the applied normal load varied in the range 10-80N. The microstructure, surface topography and roughness of the MCD coatings were characterised by SEM and AFM techniques. The diamond quality was assessed from micro-Raman spectroscopy. The friction evolution was characterised by a short running-in period where the main feature is a sharp peak reaching values as high as approximately 0.6 followed by a steady-state regime with very low values in the range 0.03-0.04.
749
614
193
Showing 1 to 4 of 4 Paper Titles