Abstract

Photocathodes are essential components for various applications requiring photon-to-free-electron conversion, for example, high-sensitivity photodetectors and electron injectors for free-electron lasers. Alkali antimonide thin films are widely used as photocathode materials owing to their high quantum efficiency (QE) in the visible spectral range; however, their lifetime can be limited even in ultrahigh vacuum due to their high reactivity to residual gases and sensitivity to ion back-bombardment in these applications. An ambitious technical challenge is to extend the lifetime of bialkali photocathodes by coating them with suitable materials that can isolate the photocathode films from residual gases while still maintaining their highly emissive properties. We propose the use of graphene, an atomically thin two-dimensional material with gas impermeability, as a promising candidate for this purpose. Here, we report that high-quality bialkali antimonide can be grown on a two-layer (2L) suspended graphene substrate with a peak QE of 15%. More importantly, by comparing the photoemission through varying layers of graphene, we demonstrate that photoelectrons can transmit through few-layer graphene with a maximum QE of over 0.7% at 4.5 eV for 2L graphene, corresponding to a transmission efficiency of 5%. These results demonstrate important progress toward fully encapsulated bialkali photocathodes having both high QEs and long lifetimes using atomically thin protection layers.

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