Abstract
This study investigates the deposition of amorphous silicon carbon nitride (a-SiCN) films using a microwave sheath-voltage combination plasma (MVP) source under duty-cycle-controlled deposition conditions. Duty ratios of 10, 30, 50, and 70% resulted in substrate temperatures of 180, 600, 980, and 1040 °C, respectively. The deposition rate reached a maximum of approximately 208 μm/h at a duty ratio of 30%. The atomic ratios of C, N, and Si remained nearly constant for duty ratios from 30% to 70%. X-ray diffraction confirmed that all films were amorphous. Raman spectra revealed features characteristic of amorphous carbon (a-C) for duty ratios of 30% or higher, suggesting the incorporation of a-C-like structures into the a-SiCN matrix. The film hardness increased as the duty-cycle-controlled deposition conditions shifted from 10% to 50% (180 to 980 °C), reaching a maximum of 22.65 ± 6.78 GPa at a duty ratio of 50%, and then decreased at 70% (1040 °C). These variations in hardness are suggested to be associated with coupled changes in hydrogen incorporation, C-N bonding, and the evolution of sp(2)-rich carbon clustering (graphite-like short-range ordering) under elevated temperature and ion-bombardment conditions.