4.7 Article

Quantifying low fluence ion implants in diamond-like carbon film by secondary ion mass spectrometry by understanding matrix effects

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL ATOMIC SPECTROMETRY
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 194-209

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ja00375a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JPL [1354958]
  2. NASA LARS [NNX14AF26G, 80NSSC17K0025, NNH15AZ25I, NNH15AZ67I]
  3. [EAR0622775]
  4. NASA [NNX14AF26G, 683982] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Accurate and precise measurement of minor and trace elements in diamond-like carbon (DLC) is crucial for various applications, including the use of DLC as a solar wind collector material. Matrix effects and ion implants need to be taken into consideration to achieve accurate results. Recommendations are provided for modifying data-reduction techniques for different SIMS conditions.
Minor and trace elements in diamond-like carbon (DLC) are difficult to quantify using SIMS analysis because minor elemental and structural variations can result in major matrix effects even across individual, cm-sized samples. While this material is most commonly used for tribological coatings where minor element composition is not of critical importance, it is being increasingly used in electronic devices. However, it is a unique application that spurred this work: anhydrous, tetrahedrally-coordinated DLC (ta-C) was used as a solar wind (SW) collector material in the Genesis solar-wind sample return mission (NASA Discovery 5). So, for similar to 15 years, we have been working on attaining accurate and precise measurement of minor and trace elements in the Genesis DLC using SIMS to achieve our mission goals. Specifically, we have learned to deal with relevant matrix effects in our samples, ion implants into ta-C. Our unknown element for quantification is SW Mg, a low-dose (1.67 x 10(12) at cm(-2); similar to 6 mu g g(-1 24)Mg), low-energy (similar to 24 keV average energy) implant; our standard is a high-dose (similar to 1 x 10(14) at cm(-2) of both Mg-25, Mg-26) 75 keV laboratory implant for which the absolute Mg-26/Mg-25 ratio had been measured to account for variable instrumental mass fractionation. Analyses were performed using O-2(+) primary ions having both a low impact energy and a current density of similar to 2 x 10(14) ions per cm(2). Although our unknown was solar wind, the method is applicable to many situations where minor elements in DLC need to be quantified. Recommendations are presented for modifying this data-reduction technique for other SIMS conditions.

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