Low energy (∼2 eV) positrons were deposited onto the surface of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) using a positron beam equipped with a time of flight (TOF) spectrometer. The energy of the electrons emitted as a result of various secondary processes due to positron annihilation was measured using the University of Texas at Arlington's (UTA) TOF spectrometer. The positron annihilation-induced electron spectra show the presence of a carbon KLL Auger peak at ∼263 eV. The use of a very low energy beam allowed us to observe a new feature not previously seen: a broad peak which reached to a maximum intensity at ∼4 eV and extended up to a maximum energy of ∼15 eV. The low energy nature of the peak was confirmed by the finding that the peak was eliminated when a tube in front of the sample was biased at -15 V. The determination that the electrons in the peak are leaving the surface with energies up to 7 times the incoming positron energy indicates that the electrons under the broad peak were emitted as a result of a positron annihilation related process.
CITATION STYLE
Gladen, R. W., Chirayath, V. A., Chrysler, M. D., McDonald, A. D., Fairchild, A. J., Shastry, K., … Weiss, A. H. (2017). Time of flight spectra of electrons emitted from graphite after positron annihilation. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 791). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/791/1/012031
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