Ion beams in SEM: An experiment towards a high brightness low energy spread electron impact gas ion source
Author(s) -
D.S. Jun,
Vladimir G. Kutchoukov,
P. Kruit
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of vacuum science and technology b nanotechnology and microelectronics materials processing measurement and phenomena
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.429
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 2166-2754
pISSN - 2166-2746
DOI - 10.1116/1.3660390
Subject(s) - ion source , faraday cup , ion beam deposition , ion gun , ion , atomic physics , focused ion beam , ion beam , electron beam induced deposition , ion current , xenon , materials science , electron , cathode ray , chemistry , physics , nuclear physics , organic chemistry
A next generation ion source suitable for both high resolution focused ion beam milling and imaging applications is currently being developed. The new ion source relies on a method of which positively charged ions are extracted from a miniaturized gas chamber where neutral gas atoms become ionized by direct electron impact. The use of a very small gas chamber and a very narrow electron beam (<100 nm) allows for a very small ionization volume, which, in turn, yields a small virtual source size and low energy spread. The authors estimate that using a high current density electron beam from a Schottky electron gun the reduced brightness of this source can exceed that of the Gallium Liquid Metal Ion Sources and the energy spread can be well below 1 eV at an optimal gas pressure and gas chamber spacing while producing more than 1 nA of usable ion beam current. In a proof-of-concept study, the authors have produced ions of helium, argon, xenon, and air from a prototype gas chamber using an electron probe inside a scanning electron microscope. Using micro-channel plates and a phosphor screen, ion beam patterns have been acquired demonstrating that a beam of ions can be produced from a miniaturized gas chamber. The authors have measured up to several hundreds of pico-amperes of ion current in a Faraday cup using an input electron probe current of ?14 nA with 1 keV incident energy. The authors have also verified that the ion beam current is dependent on the incident electron beam energy, gas chamber bias voltage, and the gas pressure inside the ionization chamber.IST/Imaging Science and TechnologyApplied Science
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