Abstract

As a continuation of earlier sputtering yield measurements in an ion microprobe, the influence of oxygen and nitrogen on sputtering yield, ionisation efficiency and depth resolutions has been studied. For inert gas bombardment the yield of Ti and V falls sharply at a certain oxygen exposure. While this decrease in yield can be correlated with an increase in surface binding energy in the case of titanium, cone formation causes the yield to drop for oxygen exposed vanadium. In contrast, during nitrogen bombardment the only effect of oxygen exposure is a drastic increase of the ionisation efficiency; the sputtering yield or the depth resolution Δz/z is hardly influenced by oxygen coverage. As was observed earlier in the case of Cu−Ni layers, Δz is essentially constant for erosion depthsz≳800 A, thus yielding better resolution at large depths than is to beexpected from a sequential layer removal model. The extent of the transition zone Δz, is determined by surface topography and thus depends on the target composition as well as its structure.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call