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Role of Gas Molecule Complexity in Environmental Electron Microscopy and Photoelectron Yield Spectroscopy
Authors
F Bonnie
J Scott
TW Shanley
M Toth
Publication date
30 September 2016
Publisher
'American Chemical Society (ACS)'
Doi
Abstract
© 2016 American Chemical Society. Environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) and environmental photoelectron yield spectroscopy (EPYS) enable electron imaging and spectroscopy of surfaces and interfaces in low-vacuum gaseous environments. The techniques are both appealing and limited by the range of gases that can be used to amplify electrons emitted from a sample and used to form images/spectra. However, to date only H2O and NH3 gases have been identified as highly favorable electron amplification media. Here we demonstrate that ethanol vapor (CH3CH2OH) is superior to both of these and attribute its performance to its molecular complexity and valence orbital structure. Our findings improve the present understanding of what constitutes a favorable electron amplification gas and will help expand the applicability and usefulness of the ESEM and EPYS techniques
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info:doi/10.1021%2Facsami.6b08...
Last time updated on 03/11/2020
OPUS - University of Technology Sydney
See this paper in CORE
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oai:opus.lib.uts.edu.au:10453/...
Last time updated on 13/02/2017