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Advances in Pulsed-Laser Atom Probe: Instrument and Specimen Design for Optimum Performance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2007

Joseph H. Bunton
Affiliation:
Imago Scientific Instruments Corporation, Madison, WI 53711-4951, USA
Jesse D. Olson
Affiliation:
Imago Scientific Instruments Corporation, Madison, WI 53711-4951, USA
Daniel R. Lenz
Affiliation:
Imago Scientific Instruments Corporation, Madison, WI 53711-4951, USA
Thomas F. Kelly
Affiliation:
Imago Scientific Instruments Corporation, Madison, WI 53711-4951, USA
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Abstract

The performance of the pulsed-laser atom probe can be limited by both instrument and specimen factors. The experiments described in this article were designed to identify these factors so as to provide direction for further instrument and specimen development. Good agreement between voltage-pulsed and laser-pulsed data is found when the effective pulse fraction is less than 0.2 for pulsed-laser mode. Under the conditions reported in this article, the thermal tails of the peaks in the mass spectra did not show any significant change when produced with either a 10-ps or a 120-fs pulsed-laser source. Mass resolving power generally improves as the laser spot size and laser wavelength are decreased and as the specimen tip radius, specimen taper angle, and thermal diffusivity of the specimen material are increased. However, it is shown that two of the materials used in this study, aluminum and stainless steel, depend on these factors differently. A one-dimensional heat flow model is explored to explain these differences. The model correctly predicts the behavior of the aluminum samples, but breaks down for the stainless steel samples when the tip radius is large. A more accurate three-dimensional model is needed to overcome these discrepancies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2007 Microscopy Society of America

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References

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Bunton et al

Figure 7. The effect of laser spot size on the cooling rate of the specimen and, hence, the effect of laser spot size on mass resolution.

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