36 research outputs found
Surface excitations in the modelling of electron transport for electron- beam-induced deposition experiments
The aim of the present overview article is to raise awareness of an essential
aspect that is usually not accounted for in the modelling of electron transport
for focused-electron-beam-induced deposition (FEBID) of nanostructures: surface
excitations are on the one hand responsible for a sizeable fraction of the
intensity in reflection-electron-energy-loss spectra for primary electron
energies of up to a few keV and, on the other hand, they play a key role in the
emission of secondary electrons from solids, regardless of the primary energy.
In this overview work we present a general perspective of recent works on the
subject of surface excitations and on low-energy electron transport,
highlighting the most relevant aspects for the modelling of electron transport
in FEBID simulations.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Simulation of electron transport in electron beam induced deposition of nanostructures
We present a numerical investigation of energy and charge distributions
during electron-beam-induced growth of W nanostructures on SiO2 substrates
using Monte Carlo simulation of electron transport. This study gives a
quantitative insight into the deposition of energy and charge in the substrate
and in already existing metallic nanostructures in the presence of the electron
beam. We analyze electron trajectories, inelastic mean free paths, and
distribution of backscattered electrons in different deposit compositions and
depths. We find that, while in the early stages of the nanostructure growth a
significant fraction of electron trajectories still interact with the
substrate, as the nanostructure becomes thicker the transport takes place
almost exclusively in the nanostructure. In particular, a larger deposit
density leads to enhanced electron backscattering. This work shows how
mesoscopic radiation-transport techniques can contribute to a model which
addresses the multi-scale nature of the electron-beam-induced deposition (EBID)
process. Furthermore, similar simulations can aid in understanding the role
played by backscattered electrons and emitted secondary electrons in the change
of structural properties of nanostructured materials during post-growth
electron-beam treatments.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, 1 tabl
Physics-based Simulation Models for EBSD: Advances and Challenges
EBSD has evolved into an effective tool for microstructure investigations in
the scanning electron microscope. The purpose of this contribution is to give
an overview of various simulation approaches for EBSD Kikuchi patterns and to
discuss some of the underlying physical mechanisms
Electron supersurface scattering on polycrystalline Au
Supersurface electron scattering, i.e., electron energy losses and associated deflections in vacuum above the surface of a medium, is shown to contribute significantly to electron spectra. We have obtained experimental verification (in absolute units) of theoretical predictions that the angular distribution of the supersurface backscattering probability exhibits strong oscillations which are anticorrelated with the generalized Ramsauer-Townsend minima in the backscattering probability. We have investigated 500-eV electron backscattering from an Au surface for an incidence angle of 70° and scattering angles between 37° and 165°. After removing the contribution of supersurface scattering from the experimental data, the resulting angular and energy distribution agrees with the Landau-Goudsmit-Saunderson (LGS) theory, which was proposed about 60 years ago, while the raw data are anticorrelated with LGS theory. This result implies that supersurface scattering is an essential phenomenon for quantitative understanding of electron spectra
PENGEOM A general-purpose geometry package for Monte Carlo simulation of radiation transport in complex material structures (New Version Announcement)
A new version of the code system pengeom, which provides a complete set of tools to handle different geometries in Monte Carlo simulations of radiation transport, is presented. The distribution package consists of a set of Fortran subroutines and a Java graphical user interface that allows building and debugging the geometry-definition file, and producing images of the geometry in two- and three-dimensions. A detailed description of these tools is given in the original paper [Comput. Phys. Commun. 199 (2016) 102-113] and in the code manual included in the distribution package. The present new version corrects a bug in the Fortran subroutines, and it includes various improvements of the Java graphical user interface
PENGEOM - A general-purpose geometry package for Monte Carlo simulation of radiation transport in material systems defined by quadric surfaces
The Fortran subroutine package pengeom provides a complete set of tools to handle quadric geometries in Monte Carlo simulations of radiation transport. The material structure where radiation propagates is assumed to consist of homogeneous bodies limited by quadric surfaces. The pengeom subroutines (a subset of the penelope code) track particles through the material structure, independently of the details of the physics models adopted to describe the interactions. Although these subroutines are designed for detailed simulations of photon and electron transport, where all individual interactions are simulated sequentially, they can also be used in mixed (class II) schemes for simulating the transport of high-energy charged particles, where the effect of soft interactions is described by the random-hinge method. The definition of the geometry and the details of the tracking algorithm are tailored to optimize simulation speed. The use of fuzzy quadric surfaces minimizes the impact of round-off errors. The provided software includes a Java graphical user interface for editing and debugging the geometry definition file and for visualizing the material structure. Images of the structure are generated by using the tracking subroutines and, hence, they describe the geometry actually passed to the simulation code
Boiling Crisis as a Critical Phenomenon
We present the first experimental study of intermittency and avalanche distribution during a boiling crisis. To understand the emergence of power law statistics we propose a simple spin model capturing the measured critical exponent. The model suggests that behind the critical heat flux is a percolation phenomenon involving drying-rewetting competition close to the hot surface