Effects of clumps and ion bombardment on electrical breakdown in vacuum
- 11 August 1974
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
- Vol. 7 (12) , 1740-1755
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0022-3727/7/12/319
Abstract
The formation of emitting sites on highly polished stainless steel and titanium electrodes in vacuum is investigated. It is shown that during the first application of an electric field between broad-area electrodes clumps damage the cathode surface. These clumps originate both from the cathode and the anode. If a spark-conditioned cathode with a field enhancement factor β=40 is placed opposite a new anode, an electric field of 6·5×106V m−1is enough to damage the cathode, resulting in a field enhancement factor of 100. It is demonstrated that conditioning of electrodes by sparks results from the detachment of more or less loosely bound particles from the electrodes. For small electrode separations (dV/dafter the impact on the cathode is higher than a critical field strengthFb, which equals similar 7×109V m−1.The field enhancement factor β can be decreased by ion bombardment, but the breakdown voltage is the same as after spark conditioning. It is shown that after conditioning by ion bombardment clumps are responsible for the onset of a spark.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Processes involved in the triggering of vacuum breakdown by low-velocity microparticlesJournal of Applied Physics, 1972
- Conditioning of a vacuum gap by sparks and ion bombardmentPhysica, 1972
- Micrometeoroid simulation studies on metal targetsPublished by American Geophysical Union (AGU) ,1972
- MASS ANALYSIS OF IONS PRODUCED BY HYPERVELOCITY IMPACTApplied Physics Letters, 1968
- Some effects of gases upon vacuum breakdown initiated by field emission of electronsVacuum, 1968
- Effect of Gas Pressure on Electrical Breakdown and Field EmissionJournal of Applied Physics, 1967
- Electrical Breakdown between Metal Electrodes in High Vacuum. I. TheoryJournal of Applied Physics, 1967
- Initiation of Electrical Breakdown in Ultrahigh VacuumJournal of Vacuum Science and Technology, 1964
- The Initiation of Electrical Breakdown in VacuumJournal of Applied Physics, 1952
- LVI.Theory of collision of spheres of soft metalsJournal of Computers in Education, 1930