Title of article :
Desorption of chemisorbed Carbon on Mo(1 0 0)
by noble gas ion sputtering: Validation of ground
test measurements of ion engine lifetimes
Author/Authors :
Chih-Sung Ho، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
We report desorption cross section measurements for one monolayer of chemisorbed carbon on a Mo(1 0 0) surface induced
by sputtering with noble gas ions (Ne+, Ar+
, Xe+ ) at different incident angles, ion energies, and substrate temperatures.
Desorption cross sections were determined by using low-energy ion scattering (LEIS) to monitor the increase of the signal from
the Mo substrate. A monolayer of p(1 1) carbon adatoms on the Mo(1 0 0) surface was created by dosing ethylene (C2H4) to
the substrate at 800 K, and characterized by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED).We
find that the carbon desorption cross section increases with increasing mass and energy of the impinging ions, and there is a
maximum value for the desorption cross section at an incident angle for the ions of 308 from the surface plane. The desorption
cross section also increases up to a substrate temperature of 300 8C. Values for the carbon desorption cross section for carbon
adatoms on Mo(1 0 0) by 400-eV Xe+ ion sputtering are about 2 10 15 cm2, which is one order of magnitude higher than those
for bulk carbon samples. This information is particularly important for evaluation of ion-engine lifetimes from ground-test
measurements in which contaminant carbon is deposited on Mo accelerator grids, potentially altering the sputtering rate of the
Mo. Our measurements show that monolayer amounts of carbon on Mo have desorption cross sections that are two orders of
magnitude higher than estimates of what would be required to reduce the Mo erosion rate, and thus ground-test measurements
can be used with confidence to predict ion-engine wear in space, from this perspective.
Keywords :
Ionenginelifetimes , Desorption cross section , Carbon , Desorption , Mo(1 0 0) , Sputtering , Ions , Ne+ , Ar+ , Xe+ , Low-energy ion scattering (LEIS)
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science