The present invention relates in general to a charged particle beam detection system and, in particular, to a Faraday cup detector array useful in mass spectrometry.
The inner walls of any metallic body are free of charge and electrostatic fields. Therefore, if a charged particle external to a metallic cup hits the inside of the cup and is neutralized there, the accumulated charge will flow to the outer surface of the cup. This implies that it is possible to achieve a very high charge state of the cup by depositing charge on the inside of the cup, because no potential needs to be overcome by the approaching charge. This is the working principle of a Faraday cup detector. A charged particle beam enters the cup. The particle collides with the cup wall and is neutralized as the charge is transferred to the cup. In the case of a charged particle, the now neutral atom (or molecule) may leave or stay in the cup, depending on the sticking coefficient and cup temperature. At some point in time, before the charge can leak away by other means, the charge accumulated on the cup is measured by draining away the charge through a suitable circuit.
In practice, incoming particles with energies above approximately 300 eV may invoke sputtering on the cup surface during the collision with the cup wall. In this case secondary electrons or ions are created. These secondary charged particles may leave the cup, thus altering the net balance between the charge accumulated on the cup and the incoming charge flux. These secondary particles leave the surface of the cup with only low energy and thus can be retained in the cup by creating a retarding electric field with a low voltage. Such a low potential has little effect on the incident charged particle beam. Placing a suppressor grid or electrode with an appropriate voltage in front of the entrance to the cup typically creates the retarding electric fields in Faraday cup designs. These designs trade transmission into the cup for better retention of the charge that enters. The trade-off is necessary because of the difficulty in manufacturing cups by standard means with small opening cross-sectional dimensions and large depths that would allow for effective use of simple biasing.
In combination with conventional electrometers, well-designed Faraday cups can measure charged particle currents down to I=10−14 A, representing the charge on about 50,000 ions. Therefore, Faraday cups are not as sensitive as electron multipliers or microchannel plate detectors, which have single charged particle counting capabilities. The Faraday cup's main advantages include its extreme robustness and reliability, and its linearity and capability for measuring absolute ion currents. In addition, Faraday cups are charge-integrating devices that offer the potential for use in applications requiring the capturing of charge with ratios of the time charge is measured to the time available (duty cycle) approaching unity. Unlike devices depending upon charge cascades for gain, the operating principle of Faraday cups does not require high voltages. As a result, Faraday cups will not catastrophically break down, or induce spurious ionization, if the operating environment is not a high vacuum. In fact, they work independently of the vacuum conditions of the experimental layout and can even be used under atmospheric conditions. These features make Faraday cups an integral part of many instruments that require charged particle detection under less than ideal conditions.
Faraday cup detector arrays (FCDA) have been developed to measure the spatial distribution of ions or electrons in ion implantation applications (R. B. Liebert, “Method and Apparatus for Ion Beam Centroid Location,” U.S. Pat. No. 4,724,324, Feb. 9, 1988; M. Berte et al., “Device for Quantitative Display of the Current Density Within a Charged-Particle Beam”, U.S. Pat. No. 4,290,012, Nov. 5, 1979; S. Okuda et al., “Charged-Particle Distribution Measuring Apparatus”, U.S. Pat. No. 4,992,742, Nov. 15, 1989; V. M. Benveniste et al. “Ion Beam Profiling Method and Apparatus”, U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,676, Mar. 30, 1993. C. O'Morain, et al., “Large Diameter Plasma Profile Monitoring Using Faraday Cup Arrays,” Meas. Sci. Tech., Vol. 4, pp. 1484–1488, 1993; N. Natsuaki, et al., “Spatial Dose Uniformity Monitor for Electrically Scanned Beam,” Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 49, No. 9, pp. 1300–1304, Sep. 1978.). Such a measurement has a resolution dependent on the finite size of each cup, the distance between adjacent cups in any dimension, and the width of the insulator between cups. A wide range of sizes can be, and have been, realized. Typically, designs do not consider ease, cost, and speed of manufacture, since they are for specialized applications, such as measuring beam profiles in experimental apparatuses or very high-cost electron microscopes.
Monitoring spatial distributions of charged particle beams is possible with several technologies, such as position-sensitive, microchannel-plate detectors (MCP), MCP-phosphorous screen units, or charge-coupled devices (CCD). These technologies are tailored to high sensitivity and provide the ability to count even single ions. However, they all lack linearity, ruggedness, and their amplification characteristics degrade over time. Furthermore, these devices cannot measure absolute ion currents if they are not particle counting, and are of only limited use in poor vacuum conditions, as found in the next generation of miniaturized mass spectrometers, such as portable or spacecraft-based instruments (M. P. Shiha, et al., “Development of a Miniature Gas Chromatograph—Mass Spectrometer,” Anal. Chem. Vol. 63 (18) pp. 2012–2016 (1991)). Finally, these solutions are cost intensive.
Faraday cup arrays have been developed for ion beam profiling purposes, but have been too large to be of use if high resolution is desired. (See above references.) They have been designed to provide spatial profiling of intense currents of a single type of charged particle. Device designers have given little or no attention to the requirements of measuring multiple ion currents covering a wide dynamic range beginning at low intensities and requiring high spatial resolution, such as would be seen in many mass spectrometric applications. Neither have designers been concerned with the speed of reading the array. Because applications have been specialized, present devices have not combined the previous requirements with the additional ones of ease, cost, and speed of manufacture.
The present invention addresses the key features that must be present in order for such a detector array to be useful and practical in applications other than the measurement of intense ion or electron beams, such as use as a detector in a Herzog-Mattuch type of mass spectrometer. The FCDA itself must have a fine pitch, typically of less than a millimeter from cup to cup, and it must be scalable up to several hundred cups in a linear array. The cups must intercept as much as possible of the incident charged particle beam, producing a high fill factor (ratio of sensitive detection area to the total area of the detector array). The cups and their interconnections to the electronic circuitry must be low leakage paths with controlled parasitic capacitances, with particular attention paid to minimizing the cup-to-cup capacitance, which increases as the overall array is miniaturized. The cups must also exhibit a high aspect ratio, being much deeper than wide in order to properly trap incident ions and suppress the emission of secondary electrons. Further, the FCDA must be tightly integrated with the electronic multiplexing unit (MUX) to produce a system that can be integrated into a vacuum chamber with only a minimal number of electrical feedthroughs. The multiplexing circuitry should be placed very close to the FCDA itself to minimize interference problems and maximize the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Crosstalk between cups and switching artifacts must also be reduced to a minimum in order to achieve full low-noise, high-sensitivity multichannel detection.
The present invention provides a charged particle beam detection system that includes a Faraday cup detector array (FCDA) and a tightly integrated electronic multiplexing unit (MUX). The FCDA of the invention has a variety of embodiments, several of which utilize modern microfabrication techniques and materials to realize all of the above features in a compact and economical design.
The present invention provides a Faraday cup detector array (FCDA) for charged particle beam detection. The detector being an array of Faraday cups means that the detector is position sensitive. By combining the FCDA with an electronic multiplexing unit (MUX), the present invention provides a charged particle beam detection system.
Embedding the Faraday cups in a (grounded) conducting housing, provides a small cup-to-cup capacity, which, by combining the FCDA with an electronic multiplexing unit based on a Gray-code, has then the unique capability to monitor the entire array simultaneously with a duty cycle >98%, and having a crosstalk level better than 750:1, despite the fact that the Faraday cups are packed densely. Therefore, a large fill factor (defined as the ratio of the “active opening area” to the “overall size of the detector array”) can be achieved.
Embodiments of the charged particle beam detection system of the invention include a variety of FCDA designs, all of which include electronically isolated Faraday cups (i.e., individual Faraday cups isolated by grounded walls), and are within the scope of the invention. These detector arrays can be connected to an electronic interface that multiplexes the array readout using an operational amplifier integrator system. The multiplexer interface uses a Gray-code sequencing to eliminate switching artifacts that would otherwise arise from a cascaded multiplexing scheme that is needed to address upwards of several hundred array elements.
To combine the actual detector array with the electronic interface and the amplifier to one unit provides high signal-to-noise ratios, small crosstalk, and high readout speeds.
Representative embodiments of the charged particle beam detection system (the FCDA-MUx unit) include the following four embodiments:
As noted above, all of the FCDA designs can be interfaced with an electronic multiplexing unit to provide a charged particle beam detection system (see
In one aspect, the present invention provides a Faraday cup detector array that is a charged particle beam monitor having the following characteristics:
In another aspect of the invention, a FCDA-MUX-integrating amplifier is provided. The FCDA-MUX-integrating amplifier offers the following advantages including:
(1) a reduction in the number of output lines, for example, only 5 vacuum feedthroughs are needed to read out a FCDA with 64 or 256 units;
(2) a single integrator-amplifier for the array guaranteeing uniform amplification across the entire array;
(3) an integrator unit that averages the noise (e.g., white noise), thus significantly reducing its contribution; and
(4) an integrating sample and hold circuit that simplifies the data acquisition significantly such that computer data acquisition has to match only the clock of the readout frequency rather than fast charge integration.
The FCDA-MUX unit, can be used as a low-cost position-sensitive readout mechanism for a MCP-FCDA-MUX-integrator unit.
The present invention employs the advantages of a Faraday cup to a fine spatial distribution measurement of an ion or electron beam. The present invention provides a FCDA and its electronic interface that is both a platform for a 250 μm resolution device and a low-cost method for position-sensitive particle detection. The device employs the advantages of a Faraday cup with a spatial resolution ranging from 250 mm to 0.1 inch and can be interfaced with data acquisition electronics. Such a configuration simplifies the use of array technology because only six feedthroughs are needed to read out the array, and most of the electronics are integrated with the system. Furthermore, the invention provides a low-cost method to produce long arrays of Faraday cup units, which are useful in devices such as mass spectrometers of the Herzog-Mattuch design where the ions are mass separated spatially in a focal plane. T. W. Burgoyne, et al. “Design and performance of a plasma-source mass spectrograph”, J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrometry, Vol. 8, 307–318, 1997. Thus, in another embodiment, the invention provides a microfabricated FCDA that has very high spatial resolution. The microfabricated FCDA can be manufactured at low cost and in high volume as seen in MEMS technology.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The present invention provides a Faraday cup detector array (FCDA) for charged particle beam detection. The detector being an array of Faraday cups means that the detector is position sensitive. By combining the FCDA with a properly synchronized electronic multiplexing unit (MUX), the resulting instrument has the unique capability to simultaneously monitor the entire array of Faraday cups with a duty cycle approaching 100%. The high duty cycle is achieved by collecting the ions with a large number of small, electronically decoupled Faraday cups. Because Faraday cups collect incident ions independent of their charge state, each cup is both a charged particle collector and a charge integrator. The ability of a Faraday cup to integrate the charge, in combination with the electronic multiplexing unit, which quickly reads out (and empties) the cups compared to the charge integration time of the array, provides the almost perfect duty cycle for such position-sensitive charged particle detection.
Faraday cups traditionally provide for absolute measurements of ion currents with wide dynamic range. Arrays of Faraday cups are attractive for position-sensitive detection of ions for purposes of ion beam profiling or for sensitive chemical analysis methods, such as mass spectrometry. However, several key features must be present in order for such a detector array to be useful and practical. The FCDA itself must have a fine pitch, typically of less than a millimeter from cup to cup, and it must be scalable up to several hundred cups in a linear array. The cups must intercept as much as possible of the incident ion beam, producing a high fill factor (ratio of sensitive detection area to the total area of the detector array). The cups and their interconnections to the electronic circuitry must be low leakage paths with controlled parasitic capacitances, with particular attention paid to minimizing the cup-to-cup capacitance, which increases as the overall array is miniaturized. The cups must also exhibit a high aspect ratio, being much deeper than wide, in order to properly trap incident ions and suppress the emission of secondary electrons. Further, the FCDA must be tightly integrated with the electronic multiplexing unit to produce a system that can be integrated into a vacuum chamber with only a minimal number of electrical feedthroughs. The multiplexing circuitry should be placed very close to the FCDA itself to minimize interference problems and maximize the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Crosstalk between cups and switching artifacts must also be reduced to a minimum in order to achieve full low-noise, high-sensitivity multichannel detection.
The present invention thus comprises a Faraday cup detector array (FCDA) and a tightly integrated electronic multiplexing unit (MUX). The described system is scalable from hundreds to thousands of cups in the array. The features that are common to all FCDA and MUX embodiments are discussed first, and then four representative classes of FCDA embodiments are described that achieve the high level of required performance by exploiting modern microfabrication techniques and materials.
Generic FCDA. As shown in
The generic electronic multiplexing unit (MUX) is also illustrated schematically in
Because 2 or 3 levels of analog multiplexing are required to address up to several hundred individual Faraday cups, switching artifacts are often produced when two or more switches change state with a slight time skew between them. The present invention eliminates this problem through the use of a Gray-code sequence generator that is implemented in a Generic Array Logic (GAL) programmable chip. This architecture sequences the scan through the cups in a manner whereby only one switch changes state on each increment, thus keeping any charge injection constant during the entirety of the scan. The wiring of the cups to the analog switch multiplexing chips reverses the Gray-code sequencing, thereby making the overall internal switch sequencing invisible to the other parts of the circuit.
A master clock oscillator drives the synchronous circuitry of the GAL which sequences the analog switch multiplexers to connect only one Faraday cup at a time to the input of the integrating operational amplifier. The unconnected analog multiplexer chips are disabled by a separate Gray-coded address to their chip select pins. When each cup becomes connected to the input of the integrator, it is discharged to zero and its collected charge is transferred to the integration capacitor where it is held while the PC card performs an analog-to-digital conversion. This occurs once for each cup over the whole scan, and since the discharge time for each cup is very small compared to the overall duration of the array scan, each Faraday cup integrates the incoming ion flux with a duty cycle of (N−1)/N, where N is the number of cups in the array. This allows extremely high duty cycles to be obtained, approaching 100 percent, which gives the system a sensitivity improvement factor of approximately N over scanned single-channel ion detectors (such as quadrupole detectors). For sensitive chemical analysis methods where the initial sample is very small, it is very important to not waste any incident ion flux. The present invention collects nearly all of the incident ions and thereby obtains a much higher sensitivity over competing ion detection systems by providing true multichannel detection.
Modern microfabrication methods and materials can be exploited to produce several different embodiments of the FCDA that satisfy all of the previously mentioned design elements. Four such embodiments are next specifically described in detail and include: an anodized aluminum array that is produced by precision machining; a linear array that is produced by compression stacking of precision cut laminates or shims; a microfabricated array that is produced by high aspect ratio template electroplating (LIGA); and a microfabricated array in silicon that is produced by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) and which is compatible with other silicon IC processes.
Anodized aluminum EDM FCDA. In this embodiment, deep holes are machined into an aluminum block to create the Faraday cups. The block is separated into individual cups by electric discharge machining (EDM) or other precision machining methods. The aluminum is anodized to form a layer of aluminum oxide (Al2O3 or alumina), which forms an extremely stable and low-loss insulator. The separator (the aluminum block) is then grounded. This embodiment can be mounted directly on top of a printed circuit board (PCB), as shown in
The anodized aluminum embodiment of
Stacked laminate FCDA. A linear, one-dimensional FCDA can be assembled in a sandwich fashion by compressing various precision cut laminates and shims together into a stack. Each cup unit cell is composed of two copper-clad insulating walls separated by a U-shaped copper plate. By sandwiching the U-shaped copper plate from both sides with a copper/fiberglass/copper (CFC) sheet, a 1.4 μm thick copper wall is formed for the Faraday cup. These components are illustrated in
LIGA Microfabricated FCDA. The previously described FCDA has a cup width of 700 μm with a cup wall thickness of 1.4 μm. This system proved the working principle of the concept of the invention. Because electrostatic forces, which govern the characteristics of Faraday cups, scale well down into the submicron regime, it is reasonable to assume that the existing system can be scaled to cup sizes of less than 100 μm. The scaling laws would, however, forbid scaling to the nanometer size regime where quantum effects, such as tunneling, need to be addressed. This size regime is at least 100 times smaller than the presently envisioned dimensions of the FCDA.
A microfabricated Faraday cup array (MFCA) fully realizes the benefits of the FCDA-MUX system. There are several approaches for the microfabrication of this detector array. In one embodiment, a representative MFCA was produced by the lithographie-galvanoformung-abformung (LIGA) process at MEMSTEK Products, LLC, and is shown in
DRIE Microfabricated FCDA. Alternatively, a microfabricated FCDA can be formed by an etching approach, which can be achieved using either wet etching of (111)-oriented Si wafers or by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) in more standard-(100) oriented Si wafers. Both methods produce nearly vertical sidewalls to the etched cups that are necessary for charged particle trapping with minimal backscatter.
Fabrication of the etched micromachined Faraday cup array (MFCA) includes four steps: (1) etching of vertical sidewall trenches into a silicon substrate; (2) conformal oxidation of the silicon surfaces; (3) conformal deposition of the cup conductor; and (4) patterning of the cup conductor material to form isolated electrodes. Each of these steps can be performed in several different ways. This embodiment is generally compatible with conventional trench capacitor formation that is used in silicon memory integrated circuit chips, and thus the FCDA and MUX can potentially be integrated into a single monolithic integrated circuit chip that contains both the detector array and the active transistors necessary to realize the analog multiplexing and charge integration.
Deep etching of silicon to achieve vertical sidewalls can be accomplished either by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) or by anisotropic hydroxide etches into (110) plane silicon. D. A. Baglee, et al., “Properties of Trench Capacitors for High Density DRAM Applications,” IEDM Tech. Digest, pp. 384–387, Dec. 1985. One preferred DRIE process is the Bosch process, which utilizes a high-density plasma source and a gas mixture to etch essentially vertical sidewall holes using only photoresist as a masking layer. This process was originally developed to provide higher density trench isolation and trench capacitor structures for DRAMs, but is now finding many other applications in micromachining. This process works on any orientation of silicon wafer, but has a very high cost per wafer and requires very specialized equipment. An alternative of wet anisotropic etching is by comparison very inexpensive, introduces no mechanical stress, and requires very simple equipment: only a temperature-controlled bath. Anisotropic etching to produce vertical sidewalls requires oxide or nitride masking layers and only works with (110) oriented silicon wafers which provide (111) etch stop planes that are perpendicular to the wafer surface. Potassium hydroxide and tetramethyl ammonium hydroxide (TMAH) are the most favored etchants for this purpose. E. Bassous, “Fabrication of Novel Three-Dimensional Microstructures by the Anisotropic Etching of (100) and (110) Silicon,” IEEE Trans. Electron Dev., Vol. ED-25, No. 10, pp. 1178–1185, October 1978. K. E. Bean, “Anisotropic Etching of Silicon,” IEEE Trans. Electron Dev., Vol. ED-25, No. 10, pp. 1185–1193, October 1978. H. Seidel, L., et al., “Anisotropic Etching of Crystalline Silicon in Alkaline Solutions, Parts I and II,” J. Electrochem. Soc., Vol. 137, No. 11, pp. 3612–3626, pp. 3626–3632, November 1990. However, (110) wafers, being nonstandard for the semiconductor industry, are quite expensive and difficult to obtain. Also, because the (111) etch stop planes are not perpendicular to one another, only two opposite faces of the etched pit will have vertical sidewalls; the other two sides are terminated in a pyramidal corner. Nevertheless, vertical sidewall slots can be obtained, and have been used effectively in producing microminiature Joule-Thompson refrigerators. D. B. Tuckerman, et al., “High Performance Heat Sinking for VLSI,” IEEE Electron Dev. Lett., Vol. EDL-2, No. 5, pp. 126–129, May 1981. W. A. Little, “Microminiature Refrigeration,” Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 55, No. 5, pp. 661–680, May 1984. A similar slot-like pit can be used for the MFCA.
Creation of a conformal oxide layer can be performed by oxidation of the native silicon or by deposition of silicon dioxide (SiO2) using a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process based on either silane or tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) and oxygen. Native oxidation is generally preferred for creating electronically superior Si—SiO2 interfaces (as in MOSFET production), but requires temperatures of 900° to 1100° C. CVD processes can be operated at temperatures of only 400° to 500° C., but produce poorer quality films, which can contain high levels of mechanical stress. Native oxidation is very easy and safe to perform, while CVD oxide deposition requires expensive furnace systems and toxic and pyrophoric gases.
Deposition of the cup conductor requires a conformal film of reasonably high conductivity that exhibits minimal mechanical stress with the other layers of the device. Excessive stress will cause the thin webs that separate adjacent cells to crack, destroying the device. This problem is more critical in (110) oriented silicon wafers, in which (110) cleavage planes run directly through the webs. Further, any mechanical stress will be exacerbated by thermal expansion coefficient differences between the cup conductor material and the underlying layers. From these considerations, polysilicon and tungsten are the suitable choices for the cup conductor. Both are commonly deposited by CVD processes, and both have thermal expansion coefficients that are nearly identical to single crystal silicon (2.6 ppm/° C.). More importantly, both are processes that are commonly used in the semiconductor IC industry and which are readily available at reasonable cost.
Patterning of the cup conductor material involves etching it away through photolithographically patterned holes in a masking layer. Both polysilicon and tungsten can be etched rapidly and controllably by plasma processes, which are again standard for the IC industry. However, masking a layer that is extremely nonplanar is in general very difficult and usually avoided. The usual approach is to first planarize the surface by applying a thick layer of some organic compound, either photoresist or polyimide, both of which can be applied by spin coating. Fortunately, the etched part of the cup conductor exists only on the surface of the wafer, so the planarization process is only needed to temporarily fill the cups during etching. The principal hazard in this process is that the organic layers are stripped by solvents at the end and this process can produce swelling of the resist or polyimide, which might produce cracking of the webs. Alternatively, an oxygen plasma could be used to ash the organics.
Operation of FCDA and MUX. The operation of FCDA and MUX of the invention is illustrative. In operation, a charged particle beam enters and impacts the Faraday cup detector array. Each of the cups collects the charged particle flux during the measurement time. Thereafter, each cup is read out sequentially by dumping its charge into an integrating operational amplifier. A sample-and-hold function on the operational amplifier integrator chip (Burr-Brown IVC102) measures the accumulated charge and passes the result as a DC-voltage over to an analog-to-digital converter on a PC data acquisition board. This board is housed in an IBM-PC (386-Gateway). The rate for this readout is only limited by how long one desires to accumulate charge. Because the entire array is detected simultaneously, slower scan times permit higher sensitivity without increased noise. The systems have been tested at acquisition rates for reading each cup of 17 Hz to 170 kHz.
To avoid having numerous output lines for the FCDA, the present invention provides a multiplexing unit (MUX) and amplifier interfaced with the FCDA to provide a single output line for the entire array. The MUX-unit sequentially connects each cup of the array to the one output line. As the MUX cycles through the cups based on an input clock signal, only a single cup is connected to the amplifier (output line) at any one time. All other cups face an open switch with a high input impedance (1015 Ohm) while they are waiting to be reconnected to the output line. As discussed above, Faraday cups have the unique advantage to be able to collect the incident charged particle beam independent of its charge state and effectively integrate the incoming charged particle beam continuously. With a MUX-unit switched through the array sequentially, the integrated charge of each cup is drained, amplified, and measured cyclically.
The MUX switch, such as a 64:1 or a 256:1 switch, is a composed of a cascade of smaller switches. For example, 8 individual 8:1 units feeding into a second level of one 8:1 MUX form the 64:1, respectively, the 256:1 unit is composed of 16 (16:1) feeding one 16:1 MUX. The 8:1 MUX switches can be commercial MUX switches (DG408, DG436). The MUX switches are connected to a GAL-chip (GAL22V10 or GAL26V12), which provides the logic to the MUX to perform the switching. The logic ensures a signal path through two levels of switches. A Gray code provides sequential readout of the FCDA and a unique charged particle current path at any point in time. Also, the signal logic to drive the MUX switches is generated with a GAL chip, or a computer board with logic output lines can also be used. By adding more layers to the MUX cascade, even larger MUX switches (larger than the 256:1 unit) can be developed and used. The system of the invention is upwardly scalable.
Electron multiplier and microchannel plate (MCP) detectors have very high gain factors (106); whereas a Faraday cup by itself has a gain of only unity. For a nonscanning instrument, the time available for amplification of the accumulated charge is long (10−6 sec) in typical applications, such as in the system discussed below. Therefore, a high gain operational amplifier integrator (>106−V/C) can be used. However, the superb dark counting rates of MCP units cannot be achieved with operational amplifier circuitry. Taking advantage of the op-amp gain in this manner is possible only because the FCDA is a nonscanning device utilizing the integrating character of the cups in combination with the MUX unit. Using a MCP together with the Faraday cup array can increase the sensitivity of the FCDA. Such a configuration can enable single charged particle counting capabilities.
Faraday cup detectors inherently have wide dynamic range capabilities. The individual cups can collect orders of magnitude different amounts of charge. The invention operates electronically to automatically accommodate for large differences in the voltage outputs from the individual cups. Therefore, it is unnecessary to switch between multiple detectors, as is sometimes done in conventional MS instruments in order to obtain a wide dynamic range.
FCDA Duty Cycle. Because all of the individual Faraday cups, with the exception of the single cup that is momentarily being read out, collect all ions continuously, the duty cycle is (N−1)/N, with N being the number of cups in the array. For arrays with more than 64 units, duty cycles of higher than 98% are achieved. For a representative 256 unit FCDA of the invention, a duty cycle of >99% is realized. The duty cycle does not depend on the scan frequency, which is used to read out the array.
Others (e.g., Berte, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,290,012; Okuda, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,992,742; or Benveniste, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,676) have described detector arrays that are designed for ion beam profiling applications, such as in ion implantation into semiconductors. These applications involve very high ion beam fluxes, for which detector sensitivity is not a critical design issue. The references describe detector arrays that achieve high spatial resolution by means of mechanical translation of either the array as a whole or a beam limiting aperture, and the electromechanical control of the array relative to this aperture is an essential component of the overall design. Our FCDA involves no moving parts and the individual cups remain open to capture the incident charged particle flux at all times. This feature gives our FCDA much improved sensitivity, which is required for chemical analysis methods, such as mass spectrometry. For example, the charged particle beam profiling described by Benveniste et al., (U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,676) uses a rotating graphite disk with a radial slot to cyclically scan around a series of annular detector conductors that have been patterned onto an insulating substrate. Thus, the majority of the incident charged particle beam is blocked by the rotating disk, allowing only a small fraction of the total charged particle beam flux to be captured upon the detector array itself. By keeping all of the individual Faraday cups open at all times, true multichannel detection is achieved, while the cups can be sequentially read out by the electronic multiplexing and charge integration.
V(Tcycle)FCMAX=IIonTcycle/CF-Cup, (1)
while the cup remains unconnected by the off-state of the analog switch multiplexer (Roff>1015 Ω). Here IIon is the charged particle beam current, Tcycle is the period of the readout cycle, and CF-Cup is the capacitance of the individual Faraday cup. The readout cycle is generated by a “master clock” of period tclock such that, Tcycle=Ntclock, whereby N is the number of cups in the detector array.
Once a (charged) Faraday cup is connected via the analog switch of the multiplexer chip to the integrator, the virtual ground at the input of the integrator will cause the accumulated charge to flow from the selected Faraday cup of the array into the integrator and charge up the integrator capacitor. The time dependence of the discharge of the Faraday cup is governed by the resistance between the cup and the integrator (R=400Ω) as well as the capacitance of the Faraday cup (CF-Cup=0.75 nF, for linear FCDA, FIG. 3):
V(t)FC=V(Tcycle)FCMAX exp {−t/RCF-Cup}. (2)
The integrating chip (Burr-Brown IVC-102) is an integrating transimpedance amplifier. Its output voltage V(t)outINT is proportional to the integrating time, Tcycle, and inversely proportional to the feedback capacitor, CINT. The effective transimpedance gain is −Tcycle/CINT
Using I(t)=V(t)FC/R the output voltage of the integrator for the charge accumulated by the Faraday cup becomes:
The integration must be completed within a cycle of the master clock, tend=tclock 0.8 This constraint defines the RC time constant of the integrator circuit. Thus V(tend)INT is:
In one typical embodiment of the FCDA, R=400Ω and CF-Cup=0.75 nF, giving an integration time constant of RC=0.3 μsec, compared to tend=8.0 μsec for the fastest evaluated master clock speed of 100 kHz. This easily satisfies the constraint of limit→tend≧2 RCF-Cup, making the integrator output nearly independent of the actual integration time, tend. This feature simplifies the data acquisition substantially. The control computer's speed need only match the master clock speed and does not have to produce the very fast (submicrosecond) integration process itself Therefore, a low-cost data acquisition card is all that is necessary to interface the system to a PC. The integrator output voltage is therefore
which is a direct measure of the charged particle current intercepted by the cup
Typically, the system is set up for a total gain of G=−8×107 V/C. In a typical mass spectroscopy (MS) scan, peak voltages of up to 3V (for argon), which corresponds to a charged particle beam flux of 38 nA, can be read with a signal-to-noise ratio better than 200:1. The full gain of the IVC-102 chip was reduced by a factor of 30 to prevent oversaturation of the system. Even then, such high gains, with low noise levels are very hard to achieve with conventional transimpedance amplifiers in a direct measurement of the collected charged particle current, because the integrator averages the noise, thus reducing its contribution significantly.
FCDA Readout Speed. The FCDA of the invention can be read out very rapidly. In
The ion current collected by the Faraday cup array detector can be directly read from the signal versus readout time dependency. As discussed above, the charge accumulated in a Faraday cup is dumped into the integrator chip and the result is handed over to a commercially available data acquisition card that performs analog-to-digital conversion of the signal. Since the time constant of the integrator circuit (RC) is short compared to the clock frequency, and Tcycle=N tclock, the first derivative of the integrator output voltage with respect to the clock frequency is directly proportional to the ion current
As shown in
FCDA and MUX Sensitivity and Dynamic Range. The highest current sensitivity can be achieved in a representative FCDA-integrator unit of the invention by reducing the feedback capacitor in the integrator unit and reducing the master clock speed. Reducing the feedback capacitor increases the gain of the amplification (see Equation (4)), whereby reducing the master clock speed increases the integration time of the Faraday cup prior to draining the charge into the amplifier. Varying both the master clock speed and feedback capacitor provides for access to a very large dynamic range.
The lowest ion current that has been measured was I=1.7 pA. Collimating an argon ion beam with a variable aperture between the energy selector and magnet has formed this low ion current. The beam has been detected with a feedback capacitor of Cint=100 pF, and a readout frequency of 37 Hz. This detection limit can be decreased further through more sophisticated electronic layout such as combining MUX and op-amp on one circuit board and a subtraction of the charge-injected background noise. Comparing the I=1.7 pA (SNR 20:1,
FCDA Crosstalk. As used herein, the term “crosstalk” refers to the signal contribution from the (high current receiving) Faraday cup to a signal on a neighboring cup. The crosstalk has been measured by placing a mask on top of the FCDA, thus allowing only one cup to receive an ion current (Ar+, I=2.3 nA). Because the FCDA has a low (below 2 pF) cup-to-cup capacity, relatively wide signal trace spacing of 0.008 inch, to the first level MUX switches, and ground shielding between the signal traces in the second level muxes, only a small crosstalk level of less than 750:1 is observed. The crosstalk level for a representative FCDA can been seen in
FCDA/Computer Interface. For a representative embodiment, a “master” clock produces a free running TTL pulse train at a frequency of e.g., 675 Hz (tested from 37 Hz to 106 kHz), which defines the time base of the electronic multiplexing unit (MUX). The MUX uses this pulse train to connect the individual Faraday cups to the integrator chip (Burr-Brown IVC-102P) in a cyclic fashion and then returns to cups 0. The “low” part of the TTL pulse is used to reset the integrator circuit between each successive reading. In the beginning of the cycle (channel 0), the MUX unit sends out a TTL pulse, which is used to synchronize the PC-DACA board and the MUX-clock. Once this start pulse is received, the DACA board (National Instruments Lab PC+) makes a synchronous series of 12-bit analog-to-digital conversions at a rate of e.g., 5 kHz (higher conversion rates increase the number of data points per cup readout, which might be desirable in some applications). Background subtracted signals are read through turning the beam on and off via control of the static ion optics through the DACA board.
FCDA as Detector in a Confocal Plane Mass Spectrometer. The FCDA can be used as a charged particle beam monitor in a confocal plane mass spectrometer. The basic concept of such a confocal plane mass spectrometer is shown in
The observed relative signal levels for different species are a function of the concentration of the analyte in the argon gas, as well as their relative ionization potentials. The oxygen abundance is increased due to the use of Teflon tubing in the gas inlet system, which is semipermeable to oxygen, thus increasing the oxygen partial pressure.
To summarize, the present invention provides a charged particle detection system that includes an electronic multiplexing unit and a plurality of charge-collecting zones. The multiplexing unit is in proximity to the charge-collecting zones and is further interfaced to a means for measuring the charge collected by the charge-collecting zones. Each charge-collecting zone includes a conductive material for receiving and storing charge. Suitable conductive materials include metals such as copper, chromium, gold, tungsten, and mixtures of these metals. In one preferred embodiment, the conductive material is a vapor-deposited mixture of chromium and gold. Each charge-collecting zone is isolated and electrostatically shielded from neighboring charge-collecting zones by a separator that is an insulated electrical conductor held at a reference potential (e.g., ground potential). Each of the charge-collecting zones is also electronically interfaced to the multiplexing unit. In the system, the charge-collecting zones can be supported by the separator. In one embodiment, the separator is composed of thin insulating and conducting layers. The insulating layer is made from a high dielectric strength, low leakage material. Depending upon the nature of the support, the insulating layer can include, for example, aluminum oxide, when the support is made from aluminum, or silicon dioxide when the support is made from silicon.
The electronic multiplexing unit effects switching and electrically connects each charge-collecting zone to a means for measuring the charge collected by those zones. The multiplexing unit effects switching through sequencing using a Gray-code. The system of the invention has a duty cycle for charge collecting in the charge-collecting zone greater than 98% for each readout cycle. Means for measuring the charge collected by the charge-collecting zones include charge measuring devices known in the art including, for example, operational amplifiers and operational amplifier integrators.
Generally, the plurality of charge-collecting zones includes 2n zones, where n is an integer greater than zero. In one preferred embodiment, the system includes 64 zones and, in another preferred embodiment, the system includes 256 zones. In the system, at least one charge-collecting zone is a Faraday cup. Preferably, the plurality of charge-collecting zones is a Faraday cup detector array that is either linear or two dimensional. Generally, each Faraday cup has an aspect ratio greater than about 2:1 and, preferably, greater than about 3:1. As used herein, the term “aspect ratio” refers to the depth of the cup compared to the cup's width. The width is determined at the narrowest part of the cup; for circular cups, the width is the diameter.
A representative detection system of the invention is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the plurality of charge-collecting zones includes a stack of Faraday cups. In such a Faraday cup detector array, the plurality of cups is supported by a partially insulated conductive housing. The conductive housing is electrically connected to a reference potential (e.g., ground potential). The array also includes a means for electrically connecting the plurality of cups to an electronic interface such as shown in
In one embodiment, the separator, the plurality of charge-collecting zones, the electronic multiplexing unit, and the means for measuring the charge collected by the charge-collecting zones are mounted on a single substrate. Preferred substrates include printed circuit boards having traces, where the traces are electrically connected to the charge-collecting zones directly.
Systems formed in accordance with the present invention can include a plurality of charge-collecting zones that are microfabricated. Representative methods for microfabricating the charge-collecting zones include deep reactive ion etching and lithographie-galvanoformung-abformung processes.
A representative plurality of charge-collecting zones formed through deep reactive ion etching is illustrated in
A Faraday cup array formed by the LIGA process is illustrated in
In another embodiment, the invention provides a Faraday cup detector array that includes a plurality of Faraday cups and a partially insulated conductive housing in which the cups are supported. The conductive housing is electrically connected to a reference potential and the cup includes a conductive material that is isolated from the housing through an insulator. In a preferred embodiment, the conductive housing includes an oxidizable metal block having a length, width, and thickness, and a plurality of channels machined through its thickness for receiving the cups. When the block is bonded to an insulating substrate having means for electrically connecting the cup to an electronic interface, the means are in electrical connection with the cup. Oxidizable metals useful in this embodiment include aluminum, copper, nickel, and titanium. In a preferred embodiment, the insulating substrate includes a printed circuit board and the means for electrically connecting the cup to the electronic interface is a trace on the circuit board.
In a preferred embodiment, the system includes charge-collecting zones that are surrounded by a separator made from aluminum. In this embodiment, the aluminum separator is hard anodized aluminum.
The system of the invention can further include a mask for reducing the loss of charged particles originating from sputtering after collection of highly energetic charged particles in the charge-collecting zones. The mask includes a first surface facing the charge-collecting zones and a second surface facing outward from the charge-collecting zones. The first surface is nonconductively attached to the charge-collecting zones and the second surface includes an electrically conductive surface. The electrically conductive surface provides a suppression grid held at a predetermined potential.
The system of Claim 1 can also further include a heating means for increasing the temperature of the charge-collecting zones. In addition, the system can also include a temperature controlling means for controlling the temperature of the overall system. Ideally, the electronic portions of the system are cooled to increase signal-to-noise ratio and the charge-collecting zones are heated to reduce the sticking coefficient (i.e., to keep the cups clean).
In preferred embodiments, the charged particle detection system of the invention includes an FCDA that is microfabricated.
In one preferred embodiment, the FCDA is constructed from a compressed sandwich of precision-cut laminates and shims that define the Faraday cups and electrostatic separators.
In another preferred embodiment, the FCDA is constructed from a block of oxidizable metal (preferably aluminum) bonded to an insulating substrate with a metal oxide (aluminum oxide) forming an insulation layer. High aspect ratio channels are machined into the block to provide the Faraday cups.
In a further preferred embodiment, the FCDA is constructed using electric discharge machining (EDM) of a hard anodized metal such as aluminum, copper, nickel, or titanium.
In still a further preferred embodiment, the FCDA is constructed as an additive deposition or template electroplating of high aspect ratio metal regions to form the Faraday cups and their electrostatic separators. In this embodiment, the high aspect ratio metal parts can be created by LIGA processes. Alternatively, the high aspect ratio metal parts can be created by deep ultraviolet photolithography of thick photoresist.
In another preferred embodiment, the FCDA is constructed by subtractive etching of a single crystal semiconductor wafer or chip to form the Faraday cups having high aspect ratio. In such an embodiment, the conducting layer is silicon and the insulating layer is silicon dioxide. Alternatively, the conducting layer can be gallium arsenide. The etching can be done by deep reactive ion etching to form the cups. Thus, the FCDA can be formed on the same wafer or chip as other active electronic circuitry.
The detection system of the invention can be incorporated into a charged particle analyzer or charged particle separator including, for example, a mass spectrometer. A representative analyzer is illustrated in
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US98/21000 | Oct 1998 | WO | international |
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/744,360, filed Jan. 22, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,847,036, which is the national stage filing of International Application No. PCT/US99/23307, designating the United States, filed Oct. 6, 1999, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/116,710, filed Jan. 22, 1999.
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Child | 10611327 | US |