The present technology generally relates to the area of charged-particle energy analyzers, and more particularly, to a cylindrical deflector analyzer having six electrodes.
Electrostatic analyzers (“ESA”) are used in charged particle optics to measure the energy per unit charge distribution of ion and electron beams, in the downstream regions of thrusters. The cylindrical deflector analyzer (“CDA”) is used for the analysis of kinetic energy of electrons. A disadvantage of traditional CDAs is that the particle beam can only be focused in one plane of deflection. Thus, a need exists for an improved CDA.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present technology are directed to an analytical-numerical approach to compute the electrostatic field distribution in a six-electrode cylindrical charged-particle deflector analyzer. In some embodiments, the field distribution is found to compute as Bessel functions with pure imaginary indices. In some embodiments, imposing the Dirichlet boundary condition on the coaxial cylindrical electrode system results in a closed and compact analytical solution of the electrostatic field distribution with electrode voltage, with the geometrical parameters as the only variable.
According to an embodiment of the present technology, an electrostatic analyzer is provided. The electrostatic analyzer includes a cylindrical body having an inner cylinder and an outer cylinder that are coaxial with one another along a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical body. An inner cylindrical electrode is positioned on an exterior face of the inner cylinder. An outer cylindrical electrode is positioned on an interior face of the outer cylinder. A first azimuthal electrode positioned on a face of a first azimuthal plane that passes through the longitudinal axis. A second azimuthal electrode is positioned on a face of a second azimuthal plane that passes through the longitudinal axis. A first end electrode is positioned on a first end face of the cylindrical body. A second end electrode is positioned on a second end face of the cylindrical body.
In some embodiments, the inner cylinder and the outer cylinder are spaced apart to form a gap therebetween. The gap has an entry slit positioned at a first end thereof and an exit slit positioned at a second end thereof.
In some embodiments, the electrostatic analyzer includes a detector positioned adjacent the exit slit configured to receive a particle beam that enters the gap via the entry slit and exits the gap via the exit slit.
In some embodiments, the entry slit and the exit slit are positioned such that a particle beam is configured to enter the gap at a radius of the electrical center of the electrostatic analyzer.
In some embodiments, the inner cylindrical electrode and the outer cylindrical electrode have equal and opposite voltages applied thereto and the electrical center of the electrostatic analyzer is located at r0=√{square root over (r1r2)}, where r1 is the radius of the inner cylindrical electrode and r2 is the radius of the outer cylindrical electrode.
According to another embodiment of the present technology, a method of determining the electrostatic field distribution in an electrostatic analyzer is provided. The method includes the steps of: providing an electrostatic analyzer; grouping the boundary conditions of each of the electrodes into six simplified problems; defining the electric potential in the electrostatic analyzer by applying the Dirichlet's problem to the six simplified problems; expressing the electric potential as a product of three potential functions in terms of Laplace's equation for cylindrical coordinates; transferring a function to another side of the equation and separating the variables; using the Bessel equation to build a system of equations; and determining a general solution to the system of equations. In some embodiments, the electrostatic analyzer includes a cylindrical body having an inner cylinder and an outer cylinder that are coaxial with one another along a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical body. An inner cylindrical electrode is positioned on an exterior face of the inner cylinder. An outer cylindrical electrode is positioned on an interior face of the outer cylinder. A first azimuthal electrode positioned on a face of a first azimuthal plane that passes through the longitudinal axis. A second azimuthal electrode is positioned on a face of a second azimuthal plane that passes through the longitudinal axis. A first end electrode is positioned on a first end face of the cylindrical body. A second end electrode is positioned on a second end face of the cylindrical body.
Further objects, aspects, features, and embodiments of the present technology will be apparent from the drawing figures and below description.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present technology are directed to a six-electrode cylindrical deflector analyzer (“CDA”) and an analytical approach to compute the electrostatic field distribution in the CDA.
The inner cylindrical electrode 11 and the outer cylindrical electrode 12 are concentric and spaced apart such that a gap is formed therebetween, as shown in
In some embodiments, the cylindrical coordinate system of
S1, S2, S3, S4, S4, S6.
S
1
:U(ρ1,z,φ)=U1=1,U2=U3=U4=U5=U6=0 (1)
S
2
:U(ρ2,z,φ)=U2=1,U1=U3=U4=U5=U6=0 (2)
S
3
:U(ρ,z1,φ)=U3=1,U1=U2=U4=U5=U6=0 (3)
S
4
:U(ρ,z2,φ)=U4=1,U1=U2=U3=U5=U6=0 (4)
S
5
:U(ρ,z,φ1)=U5=1,U1=U2=U3=U4=U6=0 (5)
S
6
:U(ρ,z,φ2)=U6=1,U1=U2=U3=U4=U5=0 (6)
In some embodiments, these six partial problems arrange themselves into three groups of two problems each. In the first of these groups, the exceptional face is one of the two cylindrical faces of inner cylindrical electrode 11 (on the exterior face of the inner cylinder) or outer cylindrical electrode 12 (on the interior face of the outer cylinder) (ρ=const). In the second group, it is one of the two parallel faces of first end electrode 15 (on a first end face of the CDA) or second end electrode 16 (on a second end face of the CDA) (also referred to as ends z=const). In the third group it is one of the two plane faces of first azimuthal electrode 13 (on a face of the first azimuthal plane) or second azimuthal electrode 14 (on a face of the second azimuthal plane) (φ=const). These three groups are shown in
In some embodiments, the Dirichlet's problem is used in solving the solutions. The Dirichlet's problem is named after Lejeune Dirichlet, who prepared a solution by a variational method that became known as the Dirichlet principle. The existence of a unique solution is very plausible by the physical argument: any charge distribution on the boundary should, by the laws of electrostatics, determine an electrical potential as solution. The Dirichlet problem for Laplace's equation consists in finding a solution ξ on some domain S such that ξ on the boundary of S is equal to some given function. Since the Laplace operator appears in the heat equation, one physical interpretation of this problem is as follows: fix the temperature on the boundary of the domain and wait until the temperature in the interior does not change anymore; the temperature distribution in the interior will then be given by the solution to the corresponding Dirichlet problem. The Neumann boundary conditions for Laplace's equation specify not the function ξ itself on the boundary of S, but its normal derivative. Physically, this corresponds to the construction of a potential for a vector field whose effect is known at the boundary of S alone. Solutions of Laplace's equation are called harmonic functions; they are all analytic within the domain where the equation is satisfied. If any two functions are solutions to Laplace's equation (or any linear homogenous differential equation), their sum (or any linear combination) is also a solution. This property, called the principle of superposition, is useful in some embodiments of the present technology, because solutions to the complex problem are constructed by summing simplified solutions.
In some embodiments, corresponding to the three predefined potential are three different types of solution, while the two problems of any one group have solutions of the same form that differ only in constants, etc. In some embodiments, defining the electric potential in the region shown in
Writing Laplace's equation in cylindrical coordinates:
In some embodiments, expressing the potential as a product of three potential functions:
U(ρ,φ,z)=R(ρ)Z(z)Φ(φ) (8)
Substituting equation (8) into (7) and dividing by RZΦ yields:
Transferring function dependent on z on one hand side of the equation yields:
In some embodiments, this gives an equation that purely depends on function Z (z):
Depending on the sign of λ2, the equation has two possible solutions:
Z(z)=d sin(λz)+e cos(λz),for+λ2, (12)
Z(z)=d sinh(λz)+e cosh(λz),for−λ2. (13)
The potential of a flat uniform dipole layer is equal to the solid angle at which this layer is seen from the point r, taken with positive sign if the positively charged side of the layer is seen from r, and with negative sign otherwise. Thus, some embodiments refer to the quantity Z (z) as a solid angle subtended by one of the faces from the point r. In some embodiments, the complexity of the potential charges as λ takes on values on the complex plane. Returning to the left-hand side (“LHS”) of equation (10), multiplying it by ρ2 and separating the variables yields:
The chosen value of the second space variable returns a function that is uniquely dependent on φ. In some embodiments, this is useful in solving the problem with non-uniform boundary condition on the planes and cylindrical planes. A negative sign before ξ2 is used in problems with non-uniform conditions on the boundary φ=const, which arises in some embodiments. Thus, some embodiments have two other equations for Φ and R:
Equation (15) has solutions:
Some embodiments consider the field inside a complete cylinder (0≤φ≤2π), then the potential is a periodic function of the space coordinates φ with a period of 2π:
Equation (20) represents the Bessel equation of order n and argument λ. In some embodiments, a system of equations is built with solution written as:
In some embodiments, the general solution of this system is written as:
Z(z)=A1exp(λz)+B1exp(−λz),
R(ρ)=A2Jn(λρ)+B2Yn(λρ)
Φ(φ)=A3 cos(nφ)+B3 sin(nφ) (25)
Some embodiments define these equipotential boundaries or displacement potential surfaces as: z=Z0, z=0 and on the cylindrical surfaces r=r1 and r=r2 by S1: u=u1, S2: u=u2, S3: u=u3, S4: u=u4.
In some embodiments, the method of separation of variables is used to obtain analytical expressions for the displacement potential problem. Using the Fourier's method, the solutions are expressed as the product R(r)Ψ(z)Φ(θ). In some embodiments, the general solution is expressed using equation (25) as:
u(r,θ,z)=ψ(z)Φ(θ)[A2Jn(λr)+B2Yn(λr)] (26)
ψ(z)=A1eλz+B1e−λz, Φ(θ)=A3 sin(nθ)+B3 cos(nθ) and are partial solutions with Jn(λr) and Yn(λr) denoting Bessel functions of the first kind and the Neumann functions, respectively. With Am, Bm, m∈{1, 2, 3} being integral coefficients, n and λ differential parameters. In some embodiments, these unknown quantities are obtained by using the boundary conditions discussed above.
In some embodiments, the choice of cylindrical coordinates permits the possibility of expressing the potential boundary surfaces of the system as concentric cylinders with six exceptional faces: two radial faces corresponding to the radii of the internal and external cylinders, two azimuthal faces, and two planes. A six partial boundary problem corresponding to the six faces based on equations (1)-(6) is represented below:
S
1
:u(r1,z,θ)=u1:u2=u3=u4=u5=u6=0,
S
2
:u(r2,z,θ)=u2:u1=u3=u4=u5=u6=0,
S
3
:u(r,z1,θ)=u3:u1=u2=u4=u5=u6=0,
S
4
:u(r,z2,θ)=u4,u1=u2=u3=u5=u6=0,
S
5
:u(r,z,θ1)=u5:u1=u2=u3=u4=u6=0,
S
6
:u(r,z,θ2)=u6:u1=u2=u3=u4=u5=0.
In some embodiments, equation (26) is referred to as the Lame's product, which is used to build a series expression for the cases of zero potential on the surfaces of S2 and S4, while the others assume an arbitrary value that can be introduced with respect to the specific construction of the wire system. In embodiments having infinite wire in length, the faces θ=const. For the Lame's product to vanish on the boundaries θ=0 and z=0, the coefficient B3=0. This reduces the solution to:
u(r,θz)=2A1A3 sinh(λz)sin(nθ)[A2Jn(λr)+B2Yn(λr)]
For the Lame's product to take on
where v is a natural number. Equation (26) vanishes when r=r1, yielding:
In some embodiments, equation (27) is vanity on the surface r=r1, and this provides a measure for obtaining the Lame's constant λ as a solution to the transcendental equation:
In some embodiments, equation (28) has a finite number of real roots that are multiples of π. These roots can be re-arranged in order of increasing magnitude λ1, λ2, . . . λk . . . . A closed form analytical solution expressed in the form of equation (27), which converges, has been obtained in some embodiments. The only remaining unknown, the parameter Dkv is found in some embodiments by imposing the only remaining boundary condition for non-vanishing Lame's product on the surface z=Z0. In some embodiments, this requires implementing a piecewise Fourier integral transformation:
In embodiments where the non-vanishing surface is that of z=0, a similar expression is obtained if the exceptional faces are r1, r2:
In embodiments where the exceptional faces are θ0, θ1, the solution takes the form:
With ai,kv and bi,kv being associated series coefficients, respectively, for i=1, 2, 3. In some embodiments of the analytical methodology disclosed herein, if the Cartesian coordinate axis system defines the X3 axis in the direction of periodicity of wire, then the X2 axis is normal to the wire in the cross-sectional plane, and the X1 axis is along the wires. In some embodiments, the cylindrical coordinate system and axis transformations permits obtaining the general solution of the displacement:
u=u
a
+u
b
+u
c (32)
With the assumption of infinitely long cylinder in the X1 direction (which corresponds to axial symmetric problem in cylindrical coordinate system). In some embodiments, this corresponds to selecting the plane φ0=const, and in some embodiments, this constant is π for a vanishing θ. With these conditions, a solution is given:
Where Cdn(x), Sdn(x) defines the modified Bessel functions of pure imaginary indices. In some embodiments, algorithms for their computations first introduced in and it was shown that they converge after a few iterations.
In some embodiments, the electric field for a specific radial (see
where
depending on the number of terms of the series is obtained. For example, taking the field uz(r,z) with the chosen arbitrary plane r∥=const, the equipotential displacement surface corresponding to uz(r∥,z0)=const can be read out.
In some embodiment, by taking the Taylor's expansion of the electric potential about this point yields
Some embodiments define the spatial resolution in the q-direction as Δxq, where q is collinear with the coordinate axis of r or z, for example:
For the above ratio to be negative, the signs of the displacement field gradients Δruz,Δzuz have to be defined:
Equation (32) describes a closed and compact analytical expression that can be used to compute the 2D electrostatic potential distribution in a six-electrode CDA. In some embodiments, this equation is used to describe a generalized concept of a CDA with arbitrary azimuthal angle θ=φ0, as shown in
In some embodiments, the CDA is operated with equal and opposite voltages applied to the electrode plates. As shown in
Although the technology has been described and illustrated with respect to exemplary embodiments thereof, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and various other changes, omissions, and additions may be made therein and thereto, without parting from the spirit and scope of the present technology.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/144,127, filed Feb. 1, 2021, which is incorporated by reference as if disclosed herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US22/14661 | 2/1/2022 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63144127 | Feb 2021 | US |