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Microstructural Assessment of Molybdenum Disulfide Coatings Using Nanoindentation Hardness

Tomas F. Babuska, Alexander Mings, Steven R. Larson, Michael T. Dugger, Mark A. Rodriguez, John F. Curry

2025ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide MoS 2 coatings are used extensively in aerospace and defense applications due to their ultralow friction and high wear resistance. Burnished and resin-bonded MoS 2 coatings are commonly used in these applications due to simplicity in deposition and history of use, despite issues with consistency in coating properties and performance. Physical vapor deposition (PVD) of MoS 2 thin films has emerged as a process alternative in the past 50 years, promising far greater control over film structure and composition but at a greater cost. Despite PVD’s benefits, hesitance to adoption persists in high-consequence applications, not only due to increased costs but variability in resulting coating properties. These variations in properties and subsequent performance are in part due to the complexity of the PVD process and the sensitive interplay between coating process-structure-property relationships. This work aims to demystify the remaining uncertainties of the process-structure-property relationships in PVD MoS 2 . The microstructure and mechanical and tribological properties of 61 different PVD pure MoS 2 coatings are examined herein. Emphasis has been placed on developing performance-based (i.e., hardness, modulus) metrics that can assess microstructural changes (density, orientation, and crystallinity) and be utilized to accelerate process development and coating optimization. Relationships established within suggest that nanoindentation hardness can be used to infer coating performance (i.e., wear rate) and properties (i.e., density, crystalline texture, and stoichiometry). Furthermore, this work demonstrates that PVD MoS 2 coatings close to the theoretical density of MoS 2 consistently have the best tribological performance and can be reliably identified by their hardness.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceNanoindentationCoatingPhysical vapor depositionMicrostructureTribologyComposite materialModulusTexture (cosmology)Molybdenum disulfideMetallurgyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceImage (mathematics)Metal and Thin Film MechanicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials ResearchTribology and Wear Analysis