Field Ionization of Gases at a Metal Surface and the Resolution of the Field Ion Microscope
Abstract
The mechanism of field emission of positive ions is considered as depending upon the supply of molecules and their ionization probability in a field up to 500 million volts/cm. Experimental current-field characteristics match the theoretical curves. The velocity distribution, measured in a retarding potential tube, shows that the ions originate some 5 to 100 A above the surface, depending upon the field. A simple mass spectrometer is described which uses the field emitter as a point ion source. The resolution of the field ion microscope is found to depend upon tip radius, polarizability and ionization potential of the gas, and possibly upon the accommodation coefficient and the temperature. Helium seems to give the best resolution of about 4 A. The possibility of operating a field desorption microscope with sufficient resolution to show the lattice structure of the surface is discussed.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review
- Pub Date:
- May 1956
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1956PhRv..102..624M