Roger Kelly, Orlando Auciello
Surface Science
When a surface is bombarded with pulses as from a laser and the number of monolayers sputtered per pulse is sufficiently small, the emitted particles fly freely from the target surface. For yields comparable to 0.5 monolayer in 10 ns, a limited number of gas-phase interactions is known to occur, leading to a Knudsen layer. As a result the particles develop moderate forward peaking (∼cos4 θ) and begin to flow (Mach number, M ≈ 1). It is common, however, for yields to exceed 0.5 monolayer in 10 ns. We show that the resulting gas-phase interactions cause the Knudsen layer to evolve into an unsteady, adiabatic expansion which is formally like a gun which fires a finite charge into an infinite, one-dimensional barrel. An explicit solution can be obtained which has the form a = f1(x/t) and u = f2(x/t), where a is the speed of sound and u is the flow velocity. The solution is assumed to be valid up to a distance where the gas density ρ falls to the critical value ρc where free flight sets in. The particles are then characterized by extents of forward peaking much stronger than ∼cos4 θ(e.g., ∼cos25 θ in work by Namiki et al.) and correspondingly high M (cos25 θ is equivalent to an M near 4). In describing these effects, M and γ (the heat-capacity ratio) take the role of the basic parameters, the knowledge of which is essential for understanding what is happening. © 1990 American Institute of Physics.
Roger Kelly, Orlando Auciello
Surface Science
Steven Dzioba, Roger Kelly
Surface Science
Antonio Miotello, Roger Kelly, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
Roger Kelly
Proceedings of SPIE 1989