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SIMS: Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry

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2. Introduction ... The SIMS ion source is one of only a few to produce ions from solid samples ... During SIMS analysis, the sample surface is slowly sputtered away. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SIMS: Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry


1
SIMS Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry
  • Paolo Ghigna, Dipartimento di Chimica Fisica M.
    Rolla, Università di Pavia

2
Introduction
  • Bombardment of a sample surface with a primary
    ion beam followed by mass spectrometry of the
    emitted secondary ions constitutes secondary ion
    mass spectrometry (SIMS).
  • The best SIMS reference is Secondary Ion Mass
    Spectrometry

3
Uses for SIMS
  • Today, SIMS is widely used for analysis of trace
    elements in solid materials, especially
    semiconductors and thin films. The SIMS ion
    source is one of only a few to produce ions from
    solid samples without prior vaporization. The
    SIMS primary ion beam can be focused to less than
    1 um in diameter. Controlling where the primary
    ion beam strikes the sample surface provides for
    microanalysis, the measurement of the lateral
    distribution of elements on a microscopic scale.
    During SIMS analysis, the sample surface is
    slowly sputtered away. Continuous analysis while
    sputtering produces information as a function of
    depth, called a depth profile. When the
    sputtering rate is extremely slow, the entire
    analysis can be performed while consuming less
    than a tenth of an atomic monolayer. This slow
    sputtering mode is called static SIMS in contrast
    to dynamic SIMS used for depth profiles. Shallow
    sputtering minimizes the damage done to organic
    substances present on the sample surface. The
    resulting ion fragmentation patterns contain
    information useful for identifying molecular
    species. Only dynamic SIMS will be treated in
    this surface analysis computer aided instruction
    package because only dynamic SIMS yields
    quantitative information.

4
Ion Beam Sputtering
  • The bombarding primary ion beam produces
    monatomic and polyatomic particles of sample
    material and resputtered primary ions, along with
    electrons and photons. The secondary particles
    carry negative, positive, and neutral charges and
    they have kinetic energies that range from zero
    to several hundred eV.
  • Primary beam species useful in SIMS include Cs,
    O2, O , Ar, and Ga at energies between 1 and
    30 keV. Primary ions are implanted and mix with
    sample atoms to depths of 1 to 10 nm.
  • Sputter rates in typical SIMS experiments vary
    between 0.5 and 5 nm/s. Sputter rates depend on
    primary beam intensity, sample material, and
    crystal orientation.
  • The sputter yield is the ratio of the number of
    atoms sputtered to the number of impinging
    primary ions. Typical SIMS sputter yields fall in
    a range from 5 and 15.

5
Sputtering Effects
  • The collision cascade model has the best success
    at quantitatively explaining how the primary beam
    interacts with the sample atoms. In this model, a
    fast primary ion passes energy to target atoms in
    a series of binary collisions.
  • Energetic target atoms (called recoil atoms)
    collide with more target atoms. Target atoms that
    recoil back through the sample surface constitute
    sputtered material. Atoms from the sample's outer
    monolayer can be driven in about 10 nm, thus
    producing surface mixing.
  • The term knock-on also applies to surface mixing.

6
Secondary Ion Energy Distributions
  • The sputtering process produces secondary ions
    with a range of (translational) kinetic energies.
    The energy distributions are distinctly different
    for atomic and molecular ions.
  • Molecular ions have relatively narrow
    translational energy distributions because they
    have kinetic energy in internal vibrational and
    rotational modes whereas atomic ions have all
    kinetic energy in translational modes. The figure
    shows typical energy distributions for mono, di,
    and triatomic ions.

7
Secondary Ion Yields
  • The SIMS ionization efficiency is called ion
    yield, defined as the fraction of sputtered atoms
    that become ionized. Ion yields vary over many
    orders of magnitude for the various elements. The
    most obvious influences on ion yield are
    ionization potential for positive ions and
    electron affinity for negative ions. 

8
Secondary Ion Yields -- Primary Beam Effects
  • Other factors affect the secondary ionization
    efficiencies in SIMS measurements. Oxygen
    bombardment increases the yield of positive ions
    and cesium bombardment increases the yield of
    negative ions.
  • Oxygen enhancement occurs as a result of
    metal-oxygen bonds in an oxygen rich zone. When
    these bonds break in the ion emission process,
    the oxygen becomes negatively charged because its
    high electron affinity favors electron capture
    and its high ionization potential inhibits
    positive charging. The metal is left with the
    positive charge. Oxygen beam sputtering increases
    the concentration of oxygen in the surface layer.
  • The enhanced negative ion yields produced with
    cesium bombardment can be explained by work
    functions that are reduced by implantation of
    cesium into the sample surface. More secondary
    electrons are excited over the surface potential
    barrier. Increased availability of electrons
    leads to increased negative ion formation.

9
Sensitivity and Detection Limits
  • The SIMS detection limits for most trace elements
    are between 1012 and 1016 atoms/cc. In addition
    to ionization efficiencies (RSF's), two other
    factors can limit sensitivity.
  • The output of an electron multiplier is called
    dark counts or dark current if no secondary ions
    are striking it. This dark current arises from
    stray ions and electrons in instrument vacuum
    systems, and from cosmic rays.
  • Count rate limited sensitivity occurs when
    sputtering produces less secondary ion signal
    than the detector dark current. If the SIMS
    instrument introduces the analyte element, then
    the introduced level constitutes background
    limited sensitivity.
  • Oxygen, present as residual gas in vacuum
    systems, is an example of an element with
    background limited sensitivity. Analyte atoms
    sputtered from mass spectrometer parts back onto
    the sample by secondary ions constitute another
    source of background. Mass interferences also
    cause background limited sensitivity.
  •  

10
Depth Profiling
  • Monitoring the secondary ion count rate of
    selected elements as a function of time leads to
    depth profiles.
  • The following figure shows the raw data for a
    measurement of phosphorous in a silicon matrix.
  • The sample was prepared by ion implantation of
    phosphorous into a silicon wafer. The analysis
    uses Cs primary ions and negative secondary ions.

11
Bulk Analysis
  • For samples with homogeneously dispersed analyte,
    bulk analysis provides better detection limits
    than depth profiling, usually by more than an
    order of magnitude.
  • Faster sputter rates increase the secondary ion
    signal in bulk analysis. The fastest possible
    sputtering requires intense primary ion beams
    which sacrifice depth resolution because they
    cannot be focused as required for flat bottom
    (rastered) craters.
  • Otherwise, bulk analyses are similar to depth
    profiles. Ion intensity data are displayed as a
    function of time. This provides a means for
    verifying that the sample is indeed homogenous.
    In a typical heterogeneous sample, the analyte is
    concentrated in small inclusions that produce
    spikes in the data stream.

12
Ion Imaging
  • Ion images show secondary ion intensities as a
    function of location on sample surfaces. Image
    dimensions vary from 500 um to less than 10 um.
    Ion images can be acquired in two operating
    modes, called ion microscope or stigmatic
    imaging, and ion microbeam imaging or raster
    scanning. Ion microscopy requires a combination
    ion microscope/mass spectrometer capable of
    transmitting a mass selected ion beam from the
    sample to the detector without loss of lateral
    position information. Image detectors indicate
    the position of the arriving ions. Ion microscope
    images are usually round because the ion
    detectors are round. Lateral resolutions of 1 um
    are possible. A SIMS analyst selects images with
    higher lateral resolution at the expense of
    signal intensity and higher mass resolution at
    the expense of image field diameter.
  • For ion microbeam imaging, a finely focused
    primary ion beam sweeps the sample in a raster
    pattern and software saves secondary ion
    intensities as a function of beam position.
    Microbeam imaging uses standard electron
    multipliers and image shape follows raster
    pattern shape, usually square. Lateral resolution
    depends on microbeam diameter and extends down to
    20 nm for liquid metal ion guns. Some instruments
    simultaneously produce high mass resolution and
    high lateral resolution. However, the SIMS
    analyst must trade high sensitivity for high
    lateral resolution because focusing the primary
    beam to smaller diameters also reduces beam
    intensity.

13
Ion Imaging
  • The example (microbeam) images show a pyrite
    (FeS2) grain from a sample of gold ore with gold
    located in the rims of the pyrite grains. The
    image on the right is 34S and the left is 197Au.
    The numerical scales and the associated colors
    represent different ranges of secondary ion
    intensities per pixel.
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