G. Westmacott et al., SECONDARY-ION AND ELECTRON YIELD MEASUREMENTS FOR SURFACES BOMBARDED WITH LARGE MOLECULAR-IONS, Nuclear instruments & methods in physics research. Section B, Beam interactions with materials and atoms, 108(3), 1996, pp. 282-289
Secondary-ion and secondary-electron emission yields from surfaces bom
barded with large molecular ions have been measured in a tandem time-o
f-flight mass spectrometer. The primary ions were produced by matrix-a
ssisted laser desorption/ionization and ranged in mass from about 6000
to 110000 u, and in energy from 5 to 25 keV. The yields were measured
for surfaces of stainless steel and CsI in modest vacuum conditions.
Electron and ion emission were observed for incident velocities as low
as 3.5 km/s (0.05 eV/u). For a given energy, the yields decrease rapi
dly with increasing mass in the low mass range, but for large incident
projectiles at 25 keV (or higher), the efficiency of secondary ion pr
oduction is more or less constant near unity. The efficiency of second
ary electron production continues to decrease slowly with increasing m
ass, but remains > similar to 30% throughout the mass range typically
encountered in mass spectrometry of proteins (i.e. molecular weight <
similar to 300 000 u corresponding to > 0.1 eV/u). For high velocities
, the yield of electrons and ions is significantly higher for a CsI su
rface compared to stainless steel, but for velocities corresponding to
< similar to 0.4 eV/u, the emission is rather insensitive to the surf
ace.