A technique to coat hydrogen-free diamond-like carbon (DLC) films on polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) substrates has been developed by sputtering of a negatively biased graphite target in a mixture of argon and nitrogen plasma. The coated films were characterized by various methods to investigate their chemical, electronic features, and particularly their biomedical properties. DLC films produced by this method have up to 20% sp3 carbon bonds depending on the nitrogen concentration in the plasma. Raman spectroscopy revealed that, bond-disorder increases with nitrogen doping. The average grain size of DLC decreases in the nitrogen doped samples by almost 30%. The roughness of the uncoated PTFE substrate surfaces decreased dramatically from 660nm to 170nm after DLC coating. However, the nitrogen contents in the plasma have little effects on the roughness, the cluster size, and shapes. Electronic band gap of the samples decreases with adding nitrogen from ~2eV in nitrogen-free samples to ~1eV in nitrogenated samples. Lower adhesion and aggregation of platelets on PTFE surfaces coated with DLC-10% nitrogen and DLC-20% nitrogen have been observed while there is greater adhesion of platelets on DLC-30% nitrogen and DLC-40% nitrogen.