Abstract
Hard X-rays, deriving from a synchrotron light source, have been used as an effective tool for processing hybrid organic-inorganic films and thick coatings up to several micrometres. These coatings could be directly modified, in terms of composition and properties, by controlled exposure to X-rays. The physico-chemical properties of the coatings, such as hardness, refractive index and fluorescence, can be properly tuned using the interaction of hard X-rays with the sol-gel hybrid films. The changes in the microstructure have been correlated especially with the modification of the optical and the mechanical properties. A relationship between the degradation rate of the organic groups and the rise of fluorescence from the hybrid material has been observed; nanoindentation analysis of the coatings as a function of the X-ray doses has shown a not linear dependence between thickness and film hardness.
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CITATION STYLE
Jiang, Y., Carboni, D., Pinna, A., Marmiroli, B., Malfatti, L., & Innocenzi, P. (2016). Hard X-rays for processing hybrid organic-inorganic thick films. In Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Vol. 23, pp. 267–273). International Union of Crystallography. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577515018597
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