metallfilm
Metallfilm, or metal thin film, is a thin layer of metal deposited on a substrate to alter electrical, optical, or protective properties. Typical thickness ranges from a few nanometers to several micrometers. Metals commonly used include aluminum, copper, nickel, gold, silver, titanium, and chromium; alloys and multilayers are routinely engineered to tune properties such as conductivity, reflectivity, and diffusion behavior. Production methods include physical vapor deposition (PVD) techniques such as sputtering and thermal evaporation, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), electroplating, and electroless plating. Roll-to-roll and other coating processes enable large-area metallfilms on flexible substrates.
Applications are widespread. In microelectronics, metallfilms serve as wiring, contacts, seed or diffusion-barrier layers, and interconnects.
Key properties include electrical conductivity, optical reflectivity, adhesion, residual stress, and environmental stability. Film thickness, microstructure,
Challenges include oxidation of reactive metals, diffusion into substrates, and stress-induced cracking or delamination. Advances focus