Understanding surface defects, layers, and contamination
Visual degradation, loss of adhesion, corrosion, cracking, color change, fouling, or coating failure: the challenges of Materials Characterization affect every industrial sector. When a surface treatment no longer performs its function, it is essential to confirm the chemical nature of the layers, check their uniformity, measure their thickness, and identify any contamination or particulate pollution. A surface analysis approach makes it possible to link an observed defect to its real cause: process defect, aging, insufficient cleaning, poor adhesion, or physicochemical alteration of the material.
Identifying the chemical composition of the outermost surface
XPS and TOF-SIMS techniques are particularly well suited to characterizing the chemical composition of the first nanometers of a surface, identifying organic or mineral contamination, and determining the oxidation, passivation, or functionalization state. They are especially useful for confirming the nature of a surface treatment, identifying detergent residues, studying an unknown particle deposited on a coating, or analyzing a functionalized surface.
Measuring the thickness and homogeneity of layers
Cross-sectional analysis by SEM-EDX and optical microscopy makes it possible to measure the thickness of treatment layers, verify their uniformity across the part, and detect any delamination zones. These examinations are essential for validating specifications, comparing several treatment processes, or understanding a loss of performance linked to insufficient or uneven thickness.
Technical methods for surface analysis
Investigations may involve several complementary techniques: XPS and TOF-SIMS for chemical analysis of the outermost surface, SEM-EDX and FE-SEM for morphological examination and elemental analysis, AFM for topography and local properties, roughness meter and profilometry for surface finish measurement, BET for the specific surface area of powders, as well as X-ray tomography for certain non-destructive inspections. This combination makes it possible to address issues related to defects, contamination, oxidation, passivation, particles, inclusions, or coating non-conformity.
Analytical expertise to secure your materials and coatings
The laboratory supports industrial clients in the characterization of surface defects, the study of treatments, and the investigation of contamination on parts, coatings, composites, powders, and technical devices. The approach combines expertise, result interpretation, and the selection of suitable techniques to confirm the chemical composition of the outermost surface, observe morphology, study topography, check the homogeneity of a treatment, and investigate complex failures. To learn more about the available methods, see Nos Equipements Pour La Caracterisation De Surface Et L Analyse De Defaillance or discover the sectors covered on the Secteur Activite page.
Observing layers and interfaces
In addition, cross-sectional observation by SEM-EDX and microscopy makes it possible to visualize the stacking of layers, verify their continuity, detect coating failure or delamination, and link the observed chemistry to the material’s actual structure. This approach is particularly useful for multilayer systems, technical coatings, and parts exposed to corrosion or aging.
Studying topography and local defects
AFM, the roughness meter, and profilometry provide a detailed view of surface topography: roughness, grooves, microcracks, local adhesion, surface stiffness, or appearance defects. These data are valuable for correlating the surface condition with a problem of bonding, painting, wetting, or long-term durability. Depending on the need, additional investigations can also be linked to other Caracterisation Matiere approaches.
Industrial applications and support
This expertise applies to many industrial cases: qualification of a paint adhesion problem on composite materials, surface cleanliness inspection, validation of cleaning processes, optimization of surface treatments, aging studies, characterization of an unknown particle, or the study of nanoparticle functionalization. For related needs involving solid or powdered materials, it may also be useful to consult Caracterisation Grattons or La Caracterisation Thermique De Vos Materiaux Par Dsc.
Get actionable answers to decide and act
Working with an expert laboratory makes it possible to turn a visual finding or a quality deviation into analytical data that can be used for decision-making. The goal is not only to describe the surface, but to explain the origin of a defect, compare different treatment states, validate a cleaning process, guide a material choice, or improve the robustness of a coating. Thanks to laboratory expertise, manufacturers can identify, confirm, verify, compare, optimize and secure their processes and products.