%0 Journal Article %T Crystallization characteristics and chemical bonding properties of nickel carbide thin film nanocomposites %A Andrej Furlan %A Jun Lu %A Lars Hultman %A Ulf Jansson %A Martin Magnuson %J Physics %D 2014 %I arXiv %R 10.1088/0953-8984/26/41/415501 %X The crystal structure and chemical bonding of magnetron-sputtering deposited nickel carbide Ni$_{1-x}$C$_{x}$ (0.05$\leq$x$\leq$0.62) thin films have been investigated by high-resolution X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy. By using X-ray as well as electron diffraction, we found carbon-containing hcp-Ni (hcp-NiC$_{y}$ phase), instead of the expected rhombohedral-Ni$_{3}$C. At low carbon content (4.9 at\%) the thin film consists of hcp-NiC$_{y}$ nanocrystallites mixed with a smaller amount of fcc-NiC$_{x}$. The average grain size is about 10-20 nm. With the increase of carbon content to 16.3 at\%, the film contains single-phase hcp-NiC$_{y}$ nanocrystallites with expanded lattice parameters. With further increase of carbon content to 38 at\%, and 62 at\%, the films transform to X-ray amorphous materials with hcp-NiC$_{y}$ and fcc-NiC$_{x }$ nanodomain structures in an amorphous carbon-rich matrix. Raman spectra of carbon indicate dominant $sp^{2}$ hybridization, consistent with photoelectron spectra that show a decreasing amount of C-Ni phase with increasing carbon content. The Ni $3d$ - C $2p$ hybridization in the hexagonal structure gives rise to the salient double-peak structure in Ni $2p$ soft X-ray absorption spectra at 16.3 at\% that changes with carbon content. We also show that the resistivity is not only governed by the amount of carbon, but increases by more than a factor of two when the samples transform from crystalline to amorphous. %U http://arxiv.org/abs/1409.5912v1