Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2018 Annual Meeting of the APS Four Corners Section
Volume 63, Number 16
Friday–Saturday, October 12–13, 2018; University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah
Session L03: CMP + Materials 9: Plasmonics/Heterostructures/Electron Yield Measurements
11:20 AM–12:32 PM,
Saturday, October 13, 2018
JFB
Room: 103
Chair: Sheng-Ting Hung, JILA
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.4CS.L03.5
Abstract: L03.00005 : Characterization of Electron Yield Suppression with Carbon Nanotube Forest Grown on Silicon Substrates
12:20 PM–12:32 PM
Presenter:
Brian D Wood
(Utah State Univ)
Authors:
Brian D Wood
(Utah State Univ)
Justin E Christensen
(Sandia National Labs)
Jordan Lee
(Utah State University)
Gregory Wilson
(Utah State University)
JR Dennison
(Utah State University)
T.-C. Shen
(Utah State University)
Total, secondary and backscatter electron yield, along with emission energy spectra data, were taken of 3 carbon nanotube forests (CNTFs) with beam energies between 15-30,000 eV. Forests morphology, which vary in relative density, and height between 20-40 μm, were controlled by varying growth parameters. Due to their inherent microstructure and low-Z composition, CNTF’s can be used to reduce the electron yield of a base material by acting as a convoluted layer recapturing the substrate’s emitted electrons. Data analysis of a bare annealed substrate, with and without the deposited aluminum, allowed use of a multi-layered yield model to dissect the constituent contributions to the sample’s yield as a whole. Measured energy spectra of emitted electrons help determine the forest’s effectiveness at attenuating the yield, and over what energy range density and height are more influential. It is shown the forest reduces the overall yield of the substrate, substantially in the lower energy regime. At higher energies, the substrate’s yield dominates over the CNTF suppression due to their sparse packing density, and height. Treating the forest simply as a layered modification of a substrate predicts lower yield in the lower energy range, but under predicts suppression at higher energies.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.4CS.L03.5
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