Fluctuations and nonuniformity of the ion beam current and electron flow in a long‐pulse, appliedBrmagnetically insulated ion diode

1986 ◽  
Vol 59 (11) ◽  
pp. 3716-3721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshiro Nakagawa ◽  
Tamotsu Enomoto
Author(s):  
P.G. Pawar ◽  
P. Duhamel ◽  
G.W. Monk

A beam of ions of mass greater than a few atomic mass units and with sufficient energy can remove atoms from the surface of a solid material at a useful rate. A system used to achieve this purpose under controlled atmospheres is called an ion miliing machine. An ion milling apparatus presently available as IMMI-III with a IMMIAC was used in this investigation. Unless otherwise stated, all the micro milling operations were done with Ar+ at 6kv using a beam current of 100 μA for each of the two guns, with a specimen tilt of 15° from the horizontal plane.It is fairly well established that ion bombardment of the surface of homogeneous materials can produce surface topography which resembles geological erosional features.


Author(s):  
B. Domengès ◽  
P. Poirier

Abstract In this study, the resistance of FIB prepared vias was characterized by the Kelvin probe technique and their physical characteristics studied using cross-sectional analysis. Two domains of resistivity were isolated in relation to the ion beam current used for the deposition of the via metal (Pt). Also submicrometer vias were investigated on 4.2 µm deep metal lines of a BiCMOS aluminum based design and a CMOS 090 copper based one. It is shown that the controlling parameter is the shape and volume of the contact, and that the contact formation is favored by the amount of over-mill of the via into the metal line it will contact.


In s.i.m.s. the sample surface is ion bombarded and the emitted secondary ions are mass analysed. When used in the static mode with very low primary ion beam current densities (10 -11 A/mm 2 ), the technique analyses the outermost atomic layers with the following advantages (Benninghoven 1973, I975): the structural—chemical nature of the surface may be deduced from the masses of the ejected ionized clusters of atoms; detection of hydrogen and its compounds is possible; sensitivity is extremely high (10 -6 monolayer) for a number of elements. Composition profiles are obtained by increasing the primary beam current density (dynamic mode) or by combining the technique in the static mode with ion beam machining with a separate, more powerful ion source. The application of static s.i.m.s. in metallurgy has been explored by analysing a variety of alloy surfaces after fabrication procedures in relation to surface quality and subsequent performance. In a copper—silver eutectic alloy braze it was found that the composition of the solid surface depended markedly on its pretreatment. Generally there was a surface enrichment of copper relative to silver in melting processes while sawing and polishing enriched the surface in silver


2013 ◽  
Vol 1530 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bendavid ◽  
L. Wieczorek ◽  
R. Chai ◽  
J. S. Cooper ◽  
B. Raguse

ABSTRACTA large area nanogap electrode fabrication method combinig conventional lithography patterning with the of focused ion beam (FIB) is presented. Lithography and a lift-off process were used to pattern 50 nm thick platinum pads having an area of 300 μm × 300 μm. A range of 30-300 nm wide nanogaps (length from 300 μm to 10 mm ) were then etched using an FIB of Ga+ at an acceleration voltage of 30 kV at various beam currents. An investigation of Ga+ beam current ranging between 1-50 pA was undertaken to optimise the process for the current fabrication method. In this study, we used Monte Carlo simulation to calculate the damage depth in various materials by the Ga+. Calculation of the recoil cascades of the substrate atoms are also presented. The nanogap electrodes fabricated in this study were found to have empty gap resistances exceeding several hundred MΩ. A comparison of the gap length versus electrical resistance on glass substrates is presented. The results thus outline some important issues in low-conductance measurements. The proposed nanogap fabrication method can be extended to various sensor applications, such as chemical sensing, that employ the nanogap platform. This method may be used as a prototype technique for large-scale fabrication due to its simple, fast and reliable features.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Carracedo Plumed ◽  
Derek Fabel ◽  
Richard Shanks

<p>With the present AMS <sup>10</sup>Be uncertainties (~2% best case scenario) and the increasing need for more precise cosmogenic <sup>10</sup>Be data it has become imperative to improve AMS measurements. Precision depends on counting statistics which in turn depend on ion beam current stability and sample longevity. The ion beam currents are dependent on the metal matrix in which BeO is dispersed; the matrix:BeO ratio; homogeneity of the mixture and the packing of the AMS cathode. We aim to understand the effect of cathode homogeneity in generating stable beam currents. We have performed a series of experiments using different metal matrices (Nb, Ag, Fe) in different forms (solid and in solution). The metals have been added to different stages of the sample precipitation process and both BeO and Be(OH)<sub>2</sub> have been pressed into AMS cathodes and analysed at SUERC. We will discuss results of these experiments and introduce an innovative use of polyoxometalates (molibdanate and niobate) to create a homogeneous compound that has the potential to generate stable ion beam currents from sputter ion sources.</p>


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (S2) ◽  
pp. 740-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.A. Urbanik ◽  
B.I. Prenitzer ◽  
L.A. Gianhuzzi ◽  
S.R. Brown ◽  
T.L. Shofner ◽  
...  

Focused ion beam (FIB) instruments are useful for high spatial resolution milling, deposition, and imaging capabilities. As a result, FIB specimen preparation techniques have been widely accepted within the semiconductor community as a means to rapidly prepare high quality, site-specific specimens for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) [1]. In spite of the excellent results that have been observed for both high resolution (HREM) and standard TEM specimen preparation applications, a degree of structural modification is inherent to FIB milled surfaces [2,3]. The magnitude of the damage region that results from Ga+ ion bombardment is dependent on the operating parameters of the FIB (e.g., beam current, beam voltage, milling time, and the use of reactive gas assisted etching).Lattice defects occur as a consequence of FIB milling because the incident ions transfer energy to the atoms of the target material. Momentum transferred from the incident ions to the target atoms can result in the creation of point defects (e.g., vacancies, self interstitials, and interstitial and substitutional ion implantation), the generation of phonons, and plasmon excitation in the case of metal targets.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 682-687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Shorubalko ◽  
Kyoungjun Choi ◽  
Michael Stiefel ◽  
Hyung Gyu Park

Recent years have seen a great potential of the focused ion beam (FIB) technology for the nanometer-scale patterning of a freestanding two-dimensional (2D) layer. Experimentally determined sputtering yields of the perforation process can be quantitatively explained using the binary collision theory. The main peculiarity of the interaction between the ion beams and the suspended 2D material lies in the absence of collision cascades, featured by no interaction volume. Thus, the patterning resolution is directly set by the beam diameters. Here, we demonstrate pattern resolution beyond the beam size and precise profiling of the focused ion beams. We find out that FIB exposure time of individual pixels can influence the resultant pore diameter. In return, the pore dimension as a function of the exposure dose brings out the ion beam profiles. Using this method of determining an ion-beam point spread function, we verify a Gaussian profile of focused gallium ion beams. Graphene sputtering yield is extracted from the normalization of the measured Gaussian profiles, given a total beam current. Interestingly, profiling of unbeknown helium ion beams in this way results in asymmetry of the profile. Even triangular beam shapes are observed at certain helium FIB conditions, possibly attributable to the trimer nature of the beam source. Our method of profiling ion beams with 2D-layer perforation provides more information on ion beam profiles than the conventional sharp-edge scan method does.


2007 ◽  
Vol 78 (8) ◽  
pp. 086113
Author(s):  
K. Suresh ◽  
B. K. Panigrahi ◽  
K. G. M. Nair

2014 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Someraa Saleh Shakonah ◽  
Jalil Ali ◽  
Natashah Abd. Rashid ◽  
Kashif Chaudhary

Some of ion beam properties have been investigated by using Lee model code on plasma focus devices which is operated with nitrogen and helium gases. The operation of plasma focus in different pressure regime gives a consistent ion beam properties which can make the plasma focus a reliable ion beam source .These ion beam properties such as ion beam flux, ion beam fluence, ion beam energy, ion beam current, and beam ion number corresponding to gas pressure have been studied for Mather type plasma focus device. The result shows the differences between helium as lighter gas and nitrogen as heavier gas in term of ion beam properties. The fluence and flux are decrease for nitrogen while increase for helium. 


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