Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 82 / Number 5 / July 2026 / Pages 1045-1050
Research Article / dx.doi.org/10.1080/15361055.2025.2560729
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Boron carbide (B4C) is an attractive inertial confinement fusion ablator material. The fabrication of B4C ablators by magnetron sputtering requires process optimization. To increase process flexibility, here we explore high-power impulse magnetron sputter (HiPIMS) deposition of B4C in pure Ar and mixed Ar-Ne plasmas. The results show that higher plasma discharge currents can be reached with a mixed Ar-Ne plasma in the entire working pressure range studied (
mTorr). At 45 mTorr with 10% of Ne in the Ar-Ne mix, high peak target current densities of ~1 A cm−2 were demonstrated. Films deposited with such a mixed Ar-Ne plasma with a full-face erosion magnetron source on substrates biased at −25 V exhibited higher density and improved mechanical properties, albeit with higher compressive residual stresses compared to the case of HiPIMS deposition in a pure Ar plasma. This work demonstrates additional process flexibility of the HiPIMS discharge mode for the deposition of B4C coatings.