Abstract

Cesium iodide (CsI) coated carbon fiber cathodes have shown promise as a cold cathode for microwave and x-ray devices. In particular, the cathodes have demonstrated over 1 000 000 shots lifetime at operating voltages at or in excess of 165 kV and current densities greater than 25A/cm2. While the vacuum emission characteristics have been well studied, the materials characteristics of the cathodes themselves, particularly after operation, have received little attention. Furthermore, while researchers at University of Wisconsin have demonstrated a reduction in work function of carbon due to the CsI coating, the details of the emission mechanism remain poorly understood. This article gives results of a series of materials diagnostics investigating the cathode surface morphology as well as the changes in the carbon fiber structure with cathode shot history. We demonstrate that the cathode surface undergoes several changes in relation to the bond line along the fiber-substrate interface as well as at the fiber tips. While the exact mechanisms leading to these changes have not been determined, we offer several possible explanations for the changes, as well as the means by which these mechanisms can be ascertained.

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