DocumentCode :
1122776
Title :
Nitrogen-Implanted Silicon Oxynitride: A Coating for Suppressing Field Emission From Stainless Steel Used in High-Voltage Applications
Author :
Theodore, Nimel D. ; Holloway, Brian C. ; Manos, Dennis M. ; Moore, Richard ; Hernandez, Carlos ; Wang, Tong ; Dylla, H. Frederick
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Appl. Sci., Coll. of William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA
Volume :
34
Issue :
4
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
1074
Lastpage :
1079
Abstract :
In this paper, the authors examine the field emission performance of stainless steel polished to varying degrees, both before and after being coated with a nitrogen-implanted silicon oxynitride layer. The deposition procedure utilizes the simultaneous sputtering of silicon dioxide from a dielectric quartz window and ion implantation of nitrogen from an RF inductively coupled plasma. Here, the scanning field emission microscopy results indicate that prior to being coated, the number of emission sites increased drastically from 12 to more than 300 as the surface roughness increased from 4 to 64 nm, corresponding to polishing with 1-mum diamond paste to 15-mum (600 grit) silicon carbide paper. However, after being coated with nitrogen-implanted silicon oxynitride, all the samples displayed zero to five emission sites at electric field strengths at least three times higher than the uncoated stainless samples. Thus, neither the roughness of the underlying stainless steel nor that of the top surface of the coating had an effect on suppressing field emission. Depth profiling using Auger electron spectroscopy determined that the 0.24-mum-thick silicon oxynitride coating contained approximately 15% nitrogen. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of a coated silicon wafer confirmed this stoichiometry and bonding. The technical impact of this work is that coating the large contoured stainless steel surfaces with a nitrogen-implanted silicon oxynitride layer may eliminate the need for expensive labor-intensive polishing procedures currently used in high-voltage electrode structures, such as those found in electron injectors
Keywords :
Auger electron spectra; Fourier transform spectra; bonds (chemical); electron guns; field emission electron microscopy; infrared spectra; plasma immersion ion implantation; polishing; scanning electron microscopy; silicon compounds; sputter deposition; sputtered coatings; stainless steel; stoichiometry; surface roughness; 0.24 mum; 1 mum; 15 mum; Auger electron spectroscopy; Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy; PIII-deposition system; RF inductively coupled plasma; Si; SiON; bonding; depth profiling; diamond paste; dielectric quartz window; electron guns; electron injectors; emission sites; high-voltage electrode structures; nitrogen-implanted silicon oxynitride coating; plasma immersion ion implantation; polishing; scanning field emission microscopy; silicon carbide paper; silicon dioxide sputtering; stainless steel; stoichiometry; surface roughness; Coatings; Dielectrics; Electrons; Ion implantation; Nitrogen; Rough surfaces; Silicon compounds; Sputtering; Steel; Surface roughness; Electron emission; electron guns; ion implantation; plasma materials processing applications;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0093-3813
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2006.877630
Filename :
1673486
Link To Document :
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