TY - JOUR
T1 - Emission characteristics of Grimm-style glow discharge plasmas with helium matrix plasma gas containing small amounts of nitrogen
AU - Tsukiji, Machiko
AU - Wagatsuma, Kazuaki
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to Noboru Yamashita, Rigaku Corp., Japan, for measurement of the surface profile meter. The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support by grants from The Iron and Steel Institute of Japan and by a grant from the Steel Industry Foundation for the Advancement of Environmental Protection Technology, Japan. A part of this research is supported by Grant-in-Aids from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan (No. 18360016).
PY - 2007/12
Y1 - 2007/12
N2 - Glow discharge plasmas with helium-(0-16%) nitrogen mixed gas were investigated as an excitation source in optical emission spectrometry. The addition increases the sputtering rate as well as the discharge current, because nitrogen molecular ions, which act as primary ions for the cathode sputtering, are produced through Penning-type ionization collisions between helium metastables and nitrogen molecules. The intensity of a silver atomic line, Ag I 338.29 nm, is monotonically elevated along with the nitrogen partial pressure added. However, the intensities of silver ionic lines, such as Ag II 243.78 nm and Ag II 224.36 nm, gave different dependence from the intensity of the atomic line: Their intensities had maximum values at a nitrogen pressure of 30 Pa when the helium pressure and the discharge voltage were kept at 2000 Pa and 1300 V. This effect is principally because the excitations of these ionic lines are caused by collisions of the second kind with helium excited species such as helium metastables and helium ion, which are quenched through collisions with nitrogen molecules added to the helium plasma. The sputtering rate could be controlled by adding small amounts of nitrogen to the helium plasma, whereas the cathode sputtering hardly occurs in the pure helium plasma.
AB - Glow discharge plasmas with helium-(0-16%) nitrogen mixed gas were investigated as an excitation source in optical emission spectrometry. The addition increases the sputtering rate as well as the discharge current, because nitrogen molecular ions, which act as primary ions for the cathode sputtering, are produced through Penning-type ionization collisions between helium metastables and nitrogen molecules. The intensity of a silver atomic line, Ag I 338.29 nm, is monotonically elevated along with the nitrogen partial pressure added. However, the intensities of silver ionic lines, such as Ag II 243.78 nm and Ag II 224.36 nm, gave different dependence from the intensity of the atomic line: Their intensities had maximum values at a nitrogen pressure of 30 Pa when the helium pressure and the discharge voltage were kept at 2000 Pa and 1300 V. This effect is principally because the excitations of these ionic lines are caused by collisions of the second kind with helium excited species such as helium metastables and helium ion, which are quenched through collisions with nitrogen molecules added to the helium plasma. The sputtering rate could be controlled by adding small amounts of nitrogen to the helium plasma, whereas the cathode sputtering hardly occurs in the pure helium plasma.
KW - Copper
KW - Glow discharge optical emission spectrometry
KW - He-N mixed gas
KW - Penning ionization
KW - Silver
KW - Sputtering rate
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U2 - 10.1016/j.microc.2007.08.003
DO - 10.1016/j.microc.2007.08.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:36049034705
SN - 0026-265X
VL - 87
SP - 175
EP - 179
JO - Microchemical Journal
JF - Microchemical Journal
IS - 2
ER -