Right angle radio frequency magnetron sputtering technique (RAMS) was redesigned to favor the production of high-quality hydroxyapatite (HA) thin coatings for biomedical applications. Stoichiometric HA films with controlled crystallinity, thickness varying from 254 to 540 nm, crystallite mean size of 73 nm, and RMS roughness of 1.7 ± 0.9 nm, were obtained at room temperature by tuning the thermodynamic properties of the plasma sheath energy. The plasma energies were adjusted by using a suitable high magnetic field confinement of 143 mT (1430 G) and a substrate floating potential of 2 V at the substrate-to-magnetron distance of Z = 10 mm and by varying the sputtering geometry, substrate-to-magnetron distance from Z = 5 mm to Z = 18 mm, forwarded RF power and reactive gas pressure. Measurements that were taken with a Langmuir probe showed that the adjusted RAMS geometry generated a plasma with an adequate effective temperature of Teff ≈ 11.8 eV and electron density of 2.0 × 10(15) m(-3) to nucleate nanoclusters and to further crystallize the nanodomains of stoichiometric HA. The deposition mechanism in the RAMS geometry was described by the formation of building units of amorphous calcium phosphate clusters (ACP), the conversion into HA nanodomains and the crystallization of the grain domains with a preferential orientation along the HA [002] direction.
a b s t r a c tA radio-frequency magnetron sputtering technique operating in right-angle geometry (RAMS) with high plasma confinement was revised to produce thin films (15-570 nm) of fluorine-substituted hydroxyapatite, FHA, adapted to be used as nano-coatings for biomedical implants. An electron temperature of T eff ≈ 9.0 eV and a plasma electron density of 1.2 × 10 15 m −3 assured the nucleation of an amorphous fluorine-substituted hydroxyapatite phase on Si and Ti surfaces. With the aid of a Langmuir probe, the RAMS plasma energy was tuned to control the coating stoichiometry and the ratio between the crystalline and amorphous phases. The energy delivered over time from the bombardment of ions and electrons transformed the amorphous calcium phosphate phase into crystalline fluorine-substituted hydroxyapatite. The crystalline films were obtained at room temperature. The partial substitution of OH − for F − in the HA structure was confirmed by X-ray diffraction using synchrotron radiation in grazing-incidence mode, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy carried out on crosssection film samples prepared by a focused ion beam (FIB) technique revealed that the film ultrastructure was composed of columnar crystals oriented perpendicularly to the substrate surface. The crystals were connected to the substrate surface by ordered nanolayers, indicating the existence of a continuous binding between the two materials. This work demonstrates that the RAMS technique is able to produce FHA nano-coatings with controlled chemical compositions and structures on metallic implants for clinical applications.
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