John M. Kenney, Janos Kirz, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
We describe instrumentation of a scanning photoelectron microscope (SPEM), which we are presently developing and commissioning at the X1A beamline of the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS). This instrument is designed to use the soft-X-ray undulator (SXU) at the NSLS as a high-brightness source to illuminate a Fresnel zone plate, thus forming a finely focused probe, ≤ 0.2 μm in size, upon the specimen surface. A grating monochromator selects the photon energy in the 400-800 eV range with an energy resolution better than 1 eV. The expected flux in the focus is in the range 5 × 107-109 photons s-1. A single pass cylindrical mirror analyzer (CMA) is used to record photoemission spectra, or to form an image within a fixed electron energy bandwidth as the specimen is mechanically scanned. As a first test, a 1000-mesh Au grid was successfully imaged with Au 4f primary photoelectrons, achieving a resolution of about 1 μm. © 1990.
John M. Kenney, Janos Kirz, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Stephen Rothman, Erik Anderson, et al.
Physica Scripta
Harald Ade, Janos Kirz, et al.
Physica Scripta
Janos Kirz, Harald Ade, et al.
Physica Scripta