| Literature DB >> 28743901 |
Lixia Zeng1,2,3, Xianming Zhou4, Rui Cheng4, Xing Wang1,2, Jieru Ren1,2, Yu Lei4, Lidong Ma4, Yongtao Zhao1,2,4, Xiaoan Zhang4,3, Zhongfeng Xu5,6,7.
Abstract
Secondary electron emission yield from the surface of SiC ceramics induced by Xe17+ ions has been measured as a function of target temperature and incident energy. In the temperature range of 463-659 K, the total yield gradually decreases with increasing target temperature. The decrease is about 57% for 3.2 MeV Xe17+ impact, and about 62% for 4.0 MeV Xe17+ impact, which is much larger than the decrease observed previously for ion impact at low charged states. The yield dependence on the temperature is discussed in terms of work function, because both kinetic electron emission and potential electron emission are influenced by work function. In addition, our experimental data show that the total electron yield gradually increases with the kinetic energy of projectile, when the target is at a constant temperature higher than room temperature. This result can be explained by electronic stopping power which plays an important role in kinetic electron emission.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28743901 PMCID: PMC5526893 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06891-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the experimental setup used for measuring total electron yield.
Figure 2Total electron yield γ as a function of ion current for 0.8 MeV Xe17+ impacting on SiC ceramics at a temperature of 463 K.
Figure 3Total electron yield γ as a function of target temperature for 3.2 MeV and 4.0 MeV Xe17+ ions impacting on SiC ceramics in normal incident case.
Figure 4Total electron yield as a function of projectile energy for Xe17+ impacting on SiC ceramics at different target temperatures at normal incident case.
Figure 5Electronic stopping power Se and nuclear stopping power St as a function of projectile energy for Xe17+impacting on SiC ceramics calculated by SRIM2008.