Study on the characteristics of atomic hydrogen cleaning carbon contamination on multilayers

Vacuum ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 110738
Author(s):  
Yuan Song ◽  
Qipeng Lu ◽  
Xuepeng Gong ◽  
Dazhuang Wang ◽  
Zhen Zhang ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masahito Niibe ◽  
Tetsuo Harada ◽  
Akira Heya ◽  
Takeo Watanabe ◽  
Naoto Matsuo

1985 ◽  
Vol 46 (8) ◽  
pp. 1335-1344 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.P. Bouchaud ◽  
C. Lhuillier

1989 ◽  
Vol 50 (C1) ◽  
pp. C1-349-C1-352
Author(s):  
R. HOEKSTRA ◽  
K. BOORSMA ◽  
F. J . de HEER ◽  
R. MORGENSTERN

Author(s):  
Giuliano D'Ammando ◽  
Daniela Pietanza ◽  
Gianpiero Colonna ◽  
Savino Longo ◽  
Mario Capitelli

1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jr. Yates ◽  
Cheng J. T. ◽  
Gao C. C. ◽  
Colaianni Q. ◽  
Choyke M. L. ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 1448-1458
Author(s):  
Josef Kopešťanský

The effect of temperature and structure of the palladium surfaces on acetylene chemisorption was studied along with the interaction of the adsorbed layers with molecular and atomic hydrogen. The work function changes were measured and combined with the volumetric measurements and analysis of the products. At temperature below 100 °C, acetylene is adsorbed almost without dissociation and forms at least two different types of thermally stable adsorption complexes. Acetylene adsorbed at 200 °C is partly decomposed, especially in the low coverage region. Besides the above mentioned effects, the template effect of adsorbed acetylene was studied in the temperature range from -80° to 25 °C. It has been shown that this effect is a typical phenomenon of the palladium-acetylene system which is not due to surface impurities.


Author(s):  
Roger H. Stuewer

In December 1931, Harold Urey discovered deuterium (and its nucleus, the deuteron) by spectroscopically detecting the faint companion lines in the Balmer spectrum of atomic hydrogen that were produced by the heavy hydrogen isotope. In February 1932, James Chadwick, stimulated by the claim of the wife-and-husband team of Irène Curie and Frédéric Joliot that polonium alpha particles cause the emission of energetic gamma rays from beryllium, proved experimentally that not gamma rays but neutrons are emitted, thereby discovering the particle whose existence had been predicted a dozen years earlier by Chadwick’s mentor, Ernest Rutherford. In August 1932, Carl Anderson took a cloud-chamber photograph of a positron traversing a lead plate, unaware that Paul Dirac had predicted the existence of the anti-electron in 1931. These three new particles, the deuteron, neutron, and positron, were immediately incorporated into the experimental and theoretical foundations of nuclear physics.


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