A well-known use for TiN coating is for edge retention and corrosion resistance on machine tooling, such as
drill bits and
milling cutters, often improving their lifetime by a factor of three or more. Because of the metallic gold color of TiN, this material is used to coat
costume jewelry and automotive trim for decorative purposes. TiN is also widely used as a top-layer coating, usually with
nickel- or
chromium-plated substrates, on consumer plumbing fixtures and door hardware. As a coating, it is used in
aerospace and military applications and to protect the sliding surfaces of
suspension forks of
bicycles and
motorcycles, as well as the shock shafts of
radio-controlled cars. TiN is also used as a protective coating on the moving parts of many rifles and semi-automatic firearms, as it is extremely durable. As well as being durable, it is also extremely smooth, making removing the carbon build-up extremely easy. TiN is non-toxic, meets
FDA guidelines, and has seen use in
medical devices such as
scalpel blades and orthopedic
bone-saw blades, where sharpness and edge retention are important. TiN coatings have also been used in implanted
prostheses (especially
hip replacement implants) and other medical implants. Though less visible,
thin films of TiN are also used in
microelectronics, where they serve as a
conductive connection between the active device and the metal contacts used to operate the circuit, while acting as a
diffusion barrier to block the
diffusion of the metal into the silicon. In this context, TiN is classified as a "barrier metal" (electrical resistivity ~ 39 μΩ·cm Additionally, TiN thin films are currently under consideration for coating
zirconium alloys for accident-tolerant nuclear fuels. It is also used as a coating on some
compression driver diaphragms to improve performance. Owing to their high biostability, TiN layers may also be used as electrodes in
bioelectronic applications like in intelligent
implants or in-vivo
biosensors that have to withstand the severe corrosion caused by
body fluids. TiN electrodes have already been applied in the
subretinal prosthesis project as well as in biomedical microelectromechanical systems (
BioMEMS). ==Fabrication==