
Microfabricated Retarding Potential Analyzers With Enforced Aperture Alignment for Improved Ion Energy Measurements in Plasmas
Author(s) -
Eric Vincent Heubel,
Luis Fernando Velasquez-Garcia
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of microelectromechanical systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1941-0158
pISSN - 1057-7157
DOI - 10.1109/jmems.2015.2399373
Subject(s) - engineered materials, dielectrics and plasmas , components, circuits, devices and systems
We report novel retarding potential analyzers (RPAs) intended to measure the ion energy distribution of cold, high-density plasmas (λD > 50 μm, i.e., Te/ni ≥ 5.25 × 10-13 K·m-3, e.g., Te ~ 2 eV and ni ~ 5 × 1016 m-3; total pressure ~40 mTorr). By scaling down the electrode apertures and electrode separation, densely packing apertures in each electrode, and enforcing interelectrode aperture alignment, the sensor measures ion energy distribution with larger signal-to-noise ratio and resolution compared with a conventional RPA. Two implementations are demonstrated, i.e., a hybrid retarding potential analyzer (RPA) with microfabricated grids and precision-machined housing, and a fully microfabricated microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) RPA with deflection springs that enforce aperture alignment across the electrode grid stack. Using an ion source, the MEMS RPA generated data with an order of magnitude larger signal and one third the peak width compared with the data from a conventional RPA. Unlike the conventional RPA, the hybrid and MEMS RPAs were able to measure the ion energy distribution of high-density plasma from a helicon source over a wide range of power levels; however, the MEMS RPA generated data with larger signal strength and resolution, with as much as a 200-fold increase in signal strength and less than half the full width at half maximum, compared with the data from the hybrid RPA. The hybrid RPA and MEMS RPA plasma data are consistent with measurements from an independent double Langmuir probe installed in the facility.