Paper
4 March 2015 Effect of annealing time on the adsorption of cesium atoms
Sen Niu, Feng Shi, Hongchang Cheng, Long Wang, Lei Yan, Hongli Shi, Yuan Yuan, Chang Chen
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9521, Selected Papers from Conferences of the Photoelectronic Technology Committee of the Chinese Society of Astronautics 2014, Part I; 95211N (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2178361
Event: Selected Proceedings of the Photoelectronic Technology Committee Conferences held August-October 2014, 2014, China, China
Abstract
The gallium arsenide (GaAs) photocathode generally requires a high temperature thermal cleaning before (Cs, O) activation in order to obtain an atomic level clean surface. The process is useful to adsorb and deposit cesium and oxygen atoms. Generally considered, the photocathode needs to be cooled to 60℃ to activate for achieving better results. People usually keep the annealing time for at least 1.5 hours in practical production. In order to explore the effect of annealing time on cesium atoms which were adsorbed on GaAs photocathode, the experiment monitored the activation curves of three GaAs photocathodes samples which annealed for 0.5 hour, 1.0 hour, 1.5 hours respectively, and then compared the occurrence moment of the photocurrent and the first cesium peak by different annealing waiting time. The difference of the activation curves reflects indirectly that the photocathode surface temperature had an influence on the adsorption of cesium atoms during activation process. This phenomenon could explain from two aspects about atoms adsorption and electronic transport. The work has referential significance for experimental research and industrial production.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sen Niu, Feng Shi, Hongchang Cheng, Long Wang, Lei Yan, Hongli Shi, Yuan Yuan, and Chang Chen "Effect of annealing time on the adsorption of cesium atoms", Proc. SPIE 9521, Selected Papers from Conferences of the Photoelectronic Technology Committee of the Chinese Society of Astronautics 2014, Part I, 95211N (4 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2178361
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KEYWORDS
Cesium

Annealing

Chemical species

Gallium arsenide

Adsorption

Night vision

Image intensifiers

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