Claims
- 1. An ion emitter, comprising:
- a U-shaped body of electrically conductive or semi-conductive material, said U-shaped body having substantially parallel legs which are joined at the front end of said body by a bridge;
- insulator material positioned between the legs of said body so that said legs can be clamped together to compress said insulator material; and
- a needle positioned in an opening through said bridge so that when electric current is passed through said bridge, said needle is heated and when said needle is coated and biased, said needle emits ions,
- and wherein the front edge of said body is partly formed into a substantially conical surface which intersects said insulator material to limit said bridge of body material to a location adjacent said needle, and wherein said bridge has a front face which is the frustum of said conical surface and said needle lies substantially on the axis of said conical surface, and further wherein said front edge of said body carries portions of cylindrical surfaces intersecting with said conical surface surface to further limit the size of said bridge.
- 2. The ion source of claim 1 wherein the axes of said cylindrical surfaces are generally parallel to the direction of heating current through said bridge and substantially normal to the slot between said legs which contain said insulator material.
- 3. The ion source of claim 1 wherein said bridge has a smaller cross-sectional area in a direction generally at right angles to heating current flow than said legs.
- 4. The ion source of claim 3 wherein said emitter needle is made of a different material than said U-shaped body.
- 5. The ion source of claim 1 wherein there is a bore within said insulator material extending towards said bridge for the positioning of a temperature sensor within said bore for sensing temperature adjacent said bridge.
- 6. An ion source, comprising:
- first and second facing jaws, said jaws having at least one clamp groove therein for the containment of an ion emitter body, said jaws being for connection to a source of current for heating the ion emitter body and a source of bias voltage for biasing the ion emitter to emit ions;
- a vacuum chamber around said ion source, with a target holder in said vacuum chamber for carrying a target positioned in line with the ion source;
- an accelerator electrode within said vacuum chamber in line between said ion source and said target for accelerating ions from the ion source to the target;
- an ion emitter body positioned within said clamp jaws, said ion emitter body being generally U-shaped having parallel legs and having insulator material between said legs, said jaws engaging on separate legs so as to firmly retain said ion emitter body in position and facing said accelerator electrode, a bridge on said ion emitter body connected between said legs, said legs and said bridge being formed of a single structural piece of electrically conductive or semi-conductive material, wherein said ion emitter body has a truncated conical front end with said emitter needle positioned on the axis of said conical front end and extending from the truncated surface thereof, and wherein the front end of said emitter body carries cylindrical surfaces on opposite sides of said needle to restrict current flow to a path through said bridge closely adjacent said needle and to remove the insulative material from the immediate vicinity of the needle; and
- an emitter needle secured in an opening in said bridge so that said emitter needle can carry ionizable material and be heated by electric current flowing through said bridge so that said emitter needle is firmly positioned and directly heated.
Government Interests
This invention was made pursuant to Government Contract No. 81F-597000. Therefore, the Government has rights in this invention.
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
4318029 |
Jergensen |
Mar 1982 |
|
4318030 |
Jergensen |
Mar 1982 |
|
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
3404626 |
Sep 1984 |
DEX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
Prewett et al.; "Liquid Metal Source of Gold Ions," Dev. Sci. Insts. 52(4), Apr. 1981. |