Research Applications of Photoelectron Emission Microscopy

ORAL

Abstract

Photoelectron emission microscopy (PEEM) is a developing technique that images electrons emitted from conductor and semiconductor surfaces under UV, X-ray, or laser irradiation. Low energy PEEM can reveal surface morphology on a 10 nm scale and is sensitive material properties such as phase, adsorbed molecules, surface electronic structure, and other physical properties that affect work function and hence the photoelectron yield. We have used PEEM to study phase transformation in shape memory alloys diffusion of Cu in Cu/Ru bilayers and laser-induced oxygen vacancy creation on TiO$_{2}$. Femtosecond laser irradiation from a frequency-doubled Ti:sapphire oscillator was used to remove bridge-bonded oxygen atoms. To further illustrate the utility of PEEM, we will discuss applications in different fields such as thermal-induced structural phase transformation of shape memory alloys and diffusion of Cu through an Ru barrier layer.

Authors

  • Wayne Hess

    • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Gang Xiong

    • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Alan Joly

    • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Kenneth Beck

    • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Wei Wei

    • Department of Cheistry, University of Texas
  • J. Mike White

    • Department of Cheistry, University of Texas
  • Mingdong Cai

    • Department of Physics, Washington State University
  • J. Thomas Dickinson

    • Department of Physics, Washington State University