3.1: Surface morphology and roughness change
After the sputter deposition of the gold layer, the sample surface changed from a metallic silver appearance to golden colour, being more obvious with more gold deposited (Fig. 1 top). After CCT, all the samples lost their metallic lustre and turned into different colours indicating the change of surface morphology and roughness. After CCT at 620°C for 3 hours, the surface of CP-Ti showed some light blue colour, while all the gold pre-deposited samples turned into dark grey colour as shown in Fig. 1, and it became darker for samples with more gold pre-deposited. With increasing the treatment time to 40 and 80 hours, all the surfaces turned into deep dark grey colour, and so did the samples CCTed at 660°C for 3 hours.
The surface morphology of CP-Ti samples changed considerably after the CCT. For 620°C/3h treated samples, there were some white particles evenly dispersed on the surface for gold pre-deposited samples as seen in Fig. 2a-c. Further analyse by EDX (Fig. 3b) indicated that they were gold particles. With the increased amount of pre-deposited gold, the remaining particles on the surface became sparse and smaller (Fig. 2a to Fig. 2c). The grinding marks can still be clearly seen on the surface of sample 620/3 without any gold pre-deposition (Fig. 2d); however, they became less obvious for those samples with gold pre-deposition (Fig. 2a-c). The surface became moderately smoother with more gold pre-deposited (Table 1). Increasing the treatment time at 620°C to 40 and 80 hours, gold particles spread on the surface evenly and grew slightly bigger (Fig. 2e/f), while the roughness value increased slightly in contrast to the sample without gold (Table 1). For a higher temperature CCT (660°C for 3-hour), the same trend with larger gold particles was observed. Interestingly, with more gold pre-deposited on the surface, the gold particles became less populated and smaller for all the treatments for the same condition.
Elemental information on the surface and cross-section was collected and exemplified by the sample Au6m620/80 in Fig. 3. White particles (Spot 1 in Fig. 3b) on the surface are rich in gold, other regions are stoichiometrically TiO2 (Spot 2 in Fig. 3b) which are similar to the spots 3/4 in Fig. 3d in the oxide layer. The inset picture in Fig. 3a demonstrates the distribution of oxygen, gold and titanium. In a fractured oxide layer (Fig. 3c), the crystalline size in Zone A near the gold line is smaller and denser than in the other zone like B. A smaller amount of gold can be detected in the oxide layer through the thickness, and tiny gold particles are evenly dispersed in the oxide layer (Fig. 3d). There is also a clear light colour mark between the oxide layer and matrix and EDX identification suggesting it has a higher content of gold (Spot 5 in Fig. 3d). Oxygen content at spot 6 in Fig. 3d is still higher indicating the oxygen diffused into the matrix during the CCT process.
3.2: Thickness of the oxide
As shown in Fig. 4 and Fig. 5, after 3-hour CCT, the thickness of the oxide layers was about 0.2–0.3 µm for CCT without any pre-deposited layer (620/3). However, the thickness of the oxide layer increased significantly with a pre-deposited gold layer, i.e., 1 µm for sample Au3m620/3. The thickness was also larger with more gold pre-deposited on the surface, 1.5 µm and 1.8 µm for samples Au6m620/3 and Au9m620/3, separately (Fig. 4a). Extending the treatment time to 40 hours and 80 hours, the oxide layer became much thicker for gold pre-deposited samples as evidenced in Fig. 4 and Fig. 5. However, for a longer treatment like 80 hours, a smaller amount of gold (Au3m620/80) only added a 0.6 µm oxide layer to 2.6 µm from 2 µm (620/80). Double the amount of gold almost doubled the oxide layer thickness, but the difference between 6-minute and 9-minute pre-deposition was not significant. Apparently, there was a gold marker between the oxide layer and the matrix after CCT. With the increasing amount of the pre-deposited gold, the marker became clearer and thicker as shown in Fig. 4a. With a similar amount of gold pre-deposited on CP-Ti samples, the thickness of the oxide layer increased with treatment time and temperature which generally followed the thermodynamic of oxidation (Fig. 4b).
3.3: Surface phase constituents
The changes in phase constituents on the surface of CPT samples after CCT are shown in Fig. 6. After 3-hour treatment at 620°C, the three α-Ti peaks (100), (002) and (101) shifted to a lower angle due to the dissolution of the oxygen atom as an interstitial element. Rutile (110) can be identified on the surface of the sample without a pre-deposited gold layer (620/3). With the pre-deposited gold layer, the rutile peaks (110), (101), (200), (111) and (210) became significant and the crystal grew bigger with the increased amount of pre-deposited gold. In the meantime, anatase (101) can also be detected on the surface of the gold pre-deposited sample. The thickness of the oxide layers increased after a longer treatment time, i.e. 620°C/80h, the intensity of the alpha peaks decreased significantly especially on the surface with a higher amount of gold (sample Au9m620/80). Although rutile phases dominated the surface, anatase can still be identified on the surface, a higher amount of gold not only promoted the oxide formation but also benefited the growth of a mixture of anatase and rutile at this temperature range. For the samples CCTed at 620°C/40h and 660°C/3h, the phase constituents had a similar trend.
3.4: Mechanical properties
3.4.1 Surface Microhardness
The surface micro-hardness of the CP-Ti samples increased remarkably after CCT (Fig. 7). After CCT at 620°C for 3 hours, the surface hardness increased from HV0.05 274 (CPTi) to about HV0.05 509 (620/3). All the gold pre-deposited samples had notably higher surface hardness, HV0.05 858, HV0.05 915 and HV0.05 964, for Au3m620/3, Au6m620/3 and Au9m620/3 separately. The higher the amount of gold pre-deposited, the higher the surface hardness after the same CCT. A similar trend of surface hardness change occurred in other CCTs at 620°C for 40 and 80 hours and the treatment at 660°C for 3 hours as shown in Fig. 7.
3.4.2 Cross sectional nanohardness profiles
Nanoindentation was used to measure the nanohardness change under the oxide layer, and the cross-sectional nano-hardness depth profiles were plotted in Fig. 8. For CCT treatment at 620°C for 80 hours, there was a clear hardened zone up to 15 µm deep for sample 620/80; however, this zone was reduced to less than 10 µm (Fig. 8a) for those samples pre-deposited with gold. A comparable result was obtained for the sample CCTed at 620°C for 40 hours. A much shallow hardened zone of about 5 µm was found for the 3-hour short treatment at 620°C and 660°C as shown in Fig. 8b. The smaller indents near the interface in the inset pictures suggest a higher nano-hardness.
3.4.3 Scratch testing on the converted ceramic oxide layers
The scratch tests were carried out on selected samples to examine the adhesion and cohesion of the oxide layers (Fig. 9). For the short time (3-hour) treated surfaces, chips appeared at both sides from the beginning of the scratching test. Sample Au3m620/3 failed at about 20 N, and the oxide layer on sample Au9m620/3 was scrapped off at an even lower load, indicating more gold in the oxide layer led to a more brittle layer. For the longer treatment, smaller chips started to emerge at the sides for sample 620/80 when the load increased from 5 N to 10 N. The number and size of the chips both increased with the increment of the load, and a total failure occurred just under 40 N which was confirmed by the EDX analysis of the path as shown in Figs. 9b&d.
For sample Au9m620/80, larger chips appeared at the sides at a load of 10 N, and the number and size of the chips didn’t increase a lot until a load of 30 N (Fig. 9c), part of the oxide layer came off as identified by EDX (Fig. 9d). The chips developed continuously until the end of the test as indicated in Fig. 9a. A total delamination of the oxide layer occurred at a load near 40 N (Fig. 9a) which resembled that of sample 620/80.
3.4.4 Reciprocal friction and wear test against WC ball
As demonstrated in Fig. 10a, the coefficient of friction (CoF) of the untreated CP-Ti sample against the WC ball was quite high and unstable. The CoF started high at 0.50 under a load of 20 N and reduced slightly to 0.30–0.40 after a 50 cycles run-in process, it then fluctuated in the range of 0.20–0.40 before climbing again after 800 cycles to about 0.55 at the end of the test. For sample 620/3, the CoF kicked off at 0.1 and rose steadily to about 0.45 after 600 cycles, and then dropped slightly but turned more scattered. For the three samples CCTed at 620°C/3h with pre-deposited gold, the initial CoF was about 0.10, and it increased steadily to a level between 0.25 and 0.30 after 50–100 cycles and remained stable till the end of the tribo-test (Fig. 10a).
As displayed in Fig. 10b, the typical wear tracks of all the samples after tribo-test were plotted by a profilometer. Details about the thickness of the oxide layer, the width/depth of the track, the range of CoF, the wear area, and the calculated wear rate are summarised in Table 2. A deep track of 37 µm with a width of 1087 µm was produced on the untreated CP-Ti sample. The untreated sample had the highest wear rate among all the tested samples and a scuffed rough wear track with deep plastically deformed grooves and ridges was produced after the tribotest (inset picture in Fig. 10b). A lot of debris can also be found on the track which led to high and unstable friction. For sample 620/3 (Inset picture in Fig. 10a), a fractured oxide layer can be found in the whole track and some regions were delaminated. A few warped oxide layer pieces can be found in the track of sample Au3m620/3 with a much smaller number, furthermore, no total delamination of the oxide layer was found (Fig. 10a). A similar distorted oxide layer was found in the track of samples Au6m620/3 and Au9m620/3 (Inset pictures in Fig. 10c). With an increased amount of gold in the layer, the wear track was shallower and with a slower wear rate as detailed in Table 2.
As shown inFigure 11, for the sample CCTed at 620°C for 80 hours, without gold in the oxide layer, the CoF commenced at 0.12 and escalated steadily to about 0.35 after 400 cycles and then oscillated between 0.35 and 0.40, some of the oxide layers were peeled off from the surface as seen in the inset picture in Fig. 11, which might be the reason for the large fluctuations of the CoF in the second half of the tribotest. For the gold pre-deposited Au9m620/80, the onset CoF was about 0.12, it swelled to about 0.25 in the first 100 cycles and then built up smoothly to about 0.33 in the end. Some blisters can be found on the worn track and part of the oxide layers were scuffed but it was not exfoliated. The wear rate of Au9m620/80 was higher than that of 620/80. For the sample Au9m620/40, although the CoF had lower inception, it expanded rapidly to about 0.30 after 200 cycles and vibrated in the range of 0.25 and 0.35 in the remaining test. Sample Au9m660/3 had an initial CoF of 0.13, and it rose quickly in the first 200 cycles and then climbed gradually to 0.33, however, the wear track was much smoother with a very low wear rate of 3.05×10− 6 mm3/Nm.