X射线光电子能谱
螺旋钻
化学状态
同步加速器
激发态
分析化学(期刊)
X射线
结合能
化学
俄歇电子能谱
材料科学
原子物理学
物理
光学
核磁共振
核物理学
色谱法
作者
Sebastian Siol,Jennifer E. Mann,John Newman,Takuya Miyayama,Katsumi Watanabe,Patrik Schmutz,Claudia Cancellieri,Lars P. H. Jeurgens
摘要
The greater information depth provided in Hard X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (HAXPES) enables non-destructive analyses of the chemistry and electronic structure of buried interfaces. Moreover, for industrially relevant elements like Al, Si and Ti, the combined access to the Al 1s, Si 1s or Ti 1s photoelectron line and its associated Al KLL, Si KLL or Ti KLL Auger transition, as required for local chemical state analysis on the basis of the Auger parameter, is only possible with hard X-rays. Until now, such photoemission studies were only possible at synchrotron facilities. Recently however, the first commercial XPS/HAXPES systems, equipped with both soft and hard X-ray sources, have entered the market, providing unique opportunities for monitoring the local chemical state of all constituent ions in functional oxides at different probing depths, in a routine laboratory environment. Bulk-sensitive shallow core-levels can be excited using either the hard or soft X-ray source, whereas more surface-sensitive deep core-level photoelectron lines and associated Auger transitions can be measured using the hard X-ray source. As demonstrated for thin Al2O3, SiO2 and TiO2 films, the local chemical state of the constituting ions in the oxide may even be probed at near constant probing depth by careful selection of sets of photoelectron and Auger lines, as excited with the combined soft and hard X-ray sources. We highlight the potential of lab-based HAXPES for the research on functional oxides and also discuss relevant technical details regarding the calibration of the kinetic binding energy scale.
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