GLOSSARY
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ABSORPTION The process which
involves the penetration of a gas or
vapor into the bulk of a solid or liquid,
usually by some type of diffusion and its
subsequent binding or capture;
taking in.
ADHESION The atomic or
molecular attraction acting at the
surfaces of two materials in contact. It
commonly occurs between a film and a
substrate or between films in multilayer
coatings.
ADSORPTION The process by
which gas or vapor is bonded on a solid
or liquid surface; sticking.
AES Auger Electron
Spectrometry
AMORPHOUS Usually refers to
a particle or grain size smaller than 30
Å that does not show crystal structure
when using X-ray diffraction techniques.
A film structure which is without
long-range crystallographic order.
ANGLE OF INCIDENCE The angle
between the predominant direction at
which electro-magnetic radiation and/or
particles are incident on a substrate and
the normal to the substrate surface.
ANNEAL A vacuum heat
treatment of a material which relaxes or
homogenizes uneven or heterogeneous
regions in a substrate which are present
as a result of internal stress;
variations of composition or phase, or
other structural or thermodynamic
differences.
ANODE The positive electrode
in an electron device. The most positive
electrode in an ion pump. This electrode
may collect electrons and negative ions.
ATOMIC MASS UNIT A unit of
mass equal to one-twelfth of a neutral
carbon atom having six protons and six
neutrons (12 carbon); equivalent to
1.660566(E-27) kg. Abbreviated - amu.
AUGER MASS UNIT A surface
analysis technique which observes the
energy of secondary electrons ejected by
an Auger emission mechanism from a sample
bombarded with electrons (in the energy
range of 100 eV to a few keV).
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BACKSTREAMING
The movement of the vapor of a
pumps working fluid in the
direction of the region being evacuated.
BAFFLE A
system of cold surfaces placed between
the inlet of a pump and the region on
which it is pumping to condense
backstreaming vapor and return it to the
pump.
BAKE-OUT
The heating of vacuum system components
during the pumping process for the
purpose of degassing; accelerates the
evolution of adsorbed and absorbed gases.
BASEPLATE
A plate which supports a bell jar and
enclosed materials or components
subjected to vacuum, providing
mechanical, electrical and other
connections to apparatus within the
vacuum system.
BEAM
DENSITY Describes what is scientifically
the power density of an electron beam
striking a target to be melted or
evaporated.
BELL JAR A
cylindrical vacuum chamber with a
removable seal supported by a baseplate.
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CATHODE
The negative electrode in an electron
device. The most negative electrode in an
ion pump. This electrode may emit
electrons and collect positive ions.
CHEMICAL
VAPOR A deposition process in which the
vaporization of DEPOSITION (CVD) volatile
compound of the substance to be deposited
is followed by a reaction of this
compound with other gases, vapors, or
liquids at the substrate surface or by
thermal decomposition of the compound.
The result is the deposition of
nonvolatile reaction product on the
substrate surface. This is versatile
deposition technique which can utilize a
variety of chemical reactions for the
deposition of metals, semiconductors and
insulators.
COLD-CATHODE
An ionization gauge in which electrons
are released IONIZATION GAUGE from the
cathode by photon and ion bombardment at
ambient temperature, and for which
thermionic emission can be neglected.
COMPOUND
Two or more elements combined chemically
in specific proportions.
CONDENSATION
The physical process by which a vapor
becomes a liquid or solid.
CONDUCTANCE
The ration of throughput, under
steady-state conservative conditions, to
the pressure differential between two
specified cross sections inside a pumping
system.
CROSS-OVER
PRESSURE The pressure at which pumping is
transferred from one pump to another that
can produce a higher speed and/or a lower
pressure.
CRYOGENIC
PUMP A vacuum pump which operates by the
CRYOPUMP condensation and/or sorption of
gas at surfaces maintained at
temperatures sufficiently low for the
vapor pressures of the condensed gases to
be insignificant.
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DARK SPACE
Loosely applied to the Faraday Dark Space
which occurs between a cathode and plasma
in a glow discharge.
DEGASSING
The deliberate removal of gas from a
material, often achieved by heating the
material under vacuum.
DIELECTRIC
Non-conducting; insulator; charge storage
as a capacitor.
DIFFUSION
A mixing together of the molecules of
gases or liquids by spreading into one
another; migration.
DIFFUSION
PUMP A vapor pump in which the pumped gas
flows into a vapor stream under
conditions in which molecular flow
predominates. Momentum is transferred
from the vapor to the gas carrying it
along in the direction of the stream.
Pump fluid is heated in vacuum to
generate the vapor which is directed
through a nozzle. It expands freely in
the stream before reaching a cool wall
where it condenses and is returned to the
boiler to begin a new cycle.
DISSOCIATE
The process whereby a chemical compound
is broken down into its constituents on a
temporary and reversible basis.
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EJECTOR
PUMP A vapor pump in which the pumped gas
enters the pump and the vapor stream
under predominantly viscous flow
conditions.
ELECTRODE
An electrically conducting element of an
electron device, usually connected to an
external electric circuit, which emits,
collects, or influences the flow of the
current in the device.
ELECTRON
Elementary particle bearing a negative
charge and a mass approximately 1/1840 of
a hydrogen atom.
ELECTRON
BEAM A stream of electrons moving with
about the same velocity and in the same
direction, forming a beam.
ELEMENT A
Substance entirely consisting of atoms
having the same atomic number.
EPITAXY A
growth of one substance upon another. The
crystal structure of the substrate is
copied by the growing substance and
substituted for its natural structure.
ESCA
Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical
Analysis.
ETCHING
The removal of material from a surface.
EVAPORATION
The conversion of a substance from the
liquid state into the gaseous state by
heating.
EVAPORATION,
1: An evaporation technique utilizing a
resistively FILAMENT heated filament,
usually composed of refractory metal wire
or foil, for evaporating a source
material which has been previously
applied to the filament.
2: A
deposition technique utilizing a
resistively heated filament composed of
the source material itself to produce
sublimation of the source. This technique
is primarily applicable to vapor sources
having high vapor pressures at
temperatures below the melting
temperature and which are consequently
able to vaporize from the solid phase.
EVAPORATION,
FLASH An evaporation technique which
involves the continuous feeding of very
small quantities of a premixed
powder/pellets/wire of the constituents
onto the surface of a filament or of a
crucible having sufficient heat capacity
and being sufficiently high temperature
to cause instantaneous evaporation of all
components independent of their vapor
pressure.
EXOTHERMIC
Usually applied to a chemical reaction in
which energy in the form of heat is
evolved.
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FEEDTHROUGH;
A device for transmitting electrical
current, fluids or FEEDTHRU mechanical
motion through the walls of a vacuum
system; pass-through.
FEM Field
Electron Microscopy.
FILM A
planar structure of a solid built up on a
substrate by an atomic or molecular
process involving the use of controllable
deposition methods. The terms thin and
thick films are arbitrarily used at times
to indicate the geometrical thickness of
<1µm or 1µm, respectively.
FIM Field
Ion Microscopy.
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GAS A
state of matter in which the molecules
move freely to occupy the total volume of
an enclosure.
GETTER A
material which reacts readily with active
gases to form stable low vapor pressure
chemical compounds, so as to remove these
gases from the gas phase.
GRAIN
BOUNDARY Metallurgy term that describes
the region between two crystals of
different orientation in a solid body.
GRAIN SIZE
The size of a grain in a solid.
Sophisticated methods and statistics are
used for asymmetric grain measurement.
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HOT
CATHODE An ionization gauge in which
pressure is measured IONIZATION GAUGE in
terms of the current of positive ions
produced by electrons emitted form a
heated cathode.
HOT
FILAMENT An envelope which contains a hot
cathode ionization IONIZATION GAUGE TUBE
gauge and tubulation which can be
connected to a vacuum system.
HYSTERESIS
In electromagnetic and elastic
technology, descries a property such as
magnetism or strain remaining after
removal of the force causing that effect.
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IMPEDANCE
The apparent resistance in an alternating
current circuit, made up of two
components, reactance and true or ohmic
resistance; the reciprocal of
conductance.
INDUCTANCE
The effect on induced magnetic filed
produced by current flowing has on the
magnitude of that current.
ION An
atom or molecule having attained one or
more units of electrical charge due to
loss or gain of electrons.
ION
IMPLANTATION A process by which atomic
species are ionized and accelerated
towards a surface of a solid with
sufficient kinetic energy so that they
became entrapped in that solid after
impingement.
ION PUMP
An electron device in which ionization
produces a significant rate of gas
removal. The ion pump is a capture
and hold type of pump.
IONIZATION
A process which results in the formation
of ions. Such a process can occur by
adding (or removing) one or more
electrons to (or from) an atom (or
molecule).
IONIZATION
GAUGE A vacuum gauge comprising a means
of ionizing the gas and a means of
correlating the ion current to the
collector with the pressure of the gas.
ISS Ion
Scattering Spectrometry. KINETIC ENERGY
Energy due to motion.
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LAMINAR
FLOW Gas flow of sufficient velocity to
allow the gas to flow smoothly over
surface irregularities and obstructions.
LEAK A
hole or permeable element through which
leakage may occur under the action of a
pressure difference.
LEAK
DETECTOR A device for locating leaks
and/or measuring the magnitude of the
leakage.
LEED Low
Energy Electron Diffraction
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MANOMETER
An instrument for measuring the pressure
of gases and vapors.
MASS
SPECTROMETER An instrument which produces
a beam of ions from a sample, separates
the resulting mixture of ions according
to their mass-to-charge ratios, and
provides output signals which are
measurements of the relative abundance of
the ionic species present. A mass
spectrometer usually consists of an ion
source, a detector and a mass analyzer.
MEAN FREE
PATH The average distance a gas molecule
travels without colliding with another
molecule or surface.
MECHANICAL
PUMP A device with moving parts such as
rotating vanes, a piston, or eccentric
rotary members used for pumping gas or
vapor.
MICRON A
unit of pressure defined as 10-3
millimeters of mercury (E-3 torr).
MOLECULAR
FLOW The movement of a gas through a
channel under conditions such that the
man free path is much greater than the
dimension of a transverse section of the
channel. The molecules collide mainly
with the surfaces rather than with each
other.
MONOLAYER
A single layer of atoms (molecules)
completely covering a surface.
MULTILAYER
FILM A film which is a composite of two
or more films which differ in some
intrinsic property.
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NUDE GAUGE
A vacuum gauge which does not have its
own envelope; designed to be inserted
into a vacuum system.
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OUTGASSING
The evolution (setting-free, releasing)
of gas from a liquid or solid under
vacuum.
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PARTIAL
PRESSURE The pressure of a designated
component of a gaseous mixture. The sum
of the partial pressures of all the
component species in a mixture is equal
to the total pressure.
PASCAL A
basic unit of pressure equal to one
newton per square meter or 7.5(E-3) torr.
PERMEATION
The passage of gas through a solid. The
process always involves diffusion through
the solid and may involve surface
phenomena such as sorption, dissociation,
migration and desorption.
PHASE A
state of matter; solid, liquid or gas.
PHYSICAL
VAPOR A process whereby material is
transferred in a DEPOSITION vaporized
state from a source to a surface on which
the material will condense.
PIRANI
GAUGE A thermal conductivity gauge
containing a heated filament having a
large temperature coefficient of
resistance. Because heat dissipation form
the filament is a function of the gas
pressure in a certain pressure range,
filament resistance or power required to
maintain o constant filament resistance
can be correlated with gas pressure.
PLASMA An
ionized gas containing approximately
equal numbers of positive and negative
charge carriers. A state of gaseous
matter in which electrons, ions, atoms
and molecules may coexist in an
equilibrium distribution with overall,
long-range electrical neutrality.
POLYCRYSTALLINE
A film structure which consists of many
crystallites.
PRESSURE
The average normal force per unit area
exerted by gas molecules impacting on a
surface.
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RBS
Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry
REFRACTIVE
INDEX Ration of the sine of the angle of
incidence to the sine of the angle of
refraction of light as it enters a body.
It is also the ratio of the velocity of
light in the body compared with the
velocity of light in vacuum.
RESIDUAL
GAS Gas remaining in the vacuum chamber
after pump-down.
RESIDUAL
GAS A device for measuring the amounts
and species of ANALYZER various gases
present in a vacuum chamber. Also
referred to as a partial pressure
analyzer or partial pressure gauge.
RESISTANCE
HEATING Heating a material by passing an
electric current through it.
RESISTIVITY
Electrical property of a conductor that
opposes the passage of a current and
changes electric energy into heat. It is
the reciprocal of conductivity.
RHEED
Reflection High-Energy Electron
Diffraction.
RIPPLE The
alternating current component of the
output of a direct current power supply.
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SECONDARY
An electron produced by the bombardment
of a material by a primary electron.
SIGHT
PORTS Holes covered with the glass
through which the inside of a vacuum
system may be observed.
SIMS
Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry.
SINGLE
CRYSTAL A film structure which is
crystalline.
SOLENOID A
valve in which the moveable members is
actuated by an electromagnet.
SORPTION A
generic term used to describe the uptake
of a gas or vapor by a solid without
distinction as to whether the process
occurs by adsorption and/or absorption.
SPECTROPHOTOMETER
A device which continually measure light
intensity at specific frequencies over a
broad band of frequencies.
SPUTTERING
When an electrical discharge is passed
between electrodes at a low gas pressure,
the cathode electrode is slowly
disintegrated under the bombardment of
the ionized gas molecules. The
disintegrated material leaves the
electrode surface either as free atoms or
in chemical combination with the residual
gas molecules. Some of the liberated
atoms are condensed on surfaces
surrounding the cathode, the reminder are
returned to the cathode by collision with
gas molecules.
STOICHIOMETRY
The part of chemistry dealing with the
composition of substances in integral
proportions.
SUBLIMATION
The process of transition directly from
the solid to vapor phase without passing
through the intermediate liquid phase.
SUBSTRATE
A support or carrier for a partial layer,
layers, films or thin film component.
Commonly a glass slide or polycrystalline
alumina are used for thick film circuits
and single crystals for single crystal
film deposition.
SURFACE
DAMAGE The physical changes of a surface
structure to states of less regularity or
symmetry, or the chemical changes in its
composition.
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THERMISTOR
GAUGE A form of Pirani gauge in which the
temperature sensitive elements are made
of a semiconducting material instead of
metal.
THERMOCOUPLE
GAUGE A thermal conductivity gauge which
contains a heated filament and a
bi-metallic thermocouple junction for the
measurement of filament temperature a as
function of gas pressure.
TORR A
unit of pressure; 1/760th of a standard
atmosphere.
TRACE
ELEMENT An element which occurs as an
impurity in small amounts; usually less
than 1%
TRANSITION
FLOW The flow of gas through a channel
under conditions such that the mean free
path is of the same order as the
transverse dimensions of the channel. In
this pressure range, the flow
characteristics are determined by
collision of the gas molecules with the
surfaces as well as with other gas
molecules.
TRAP A
device used to capture and retain vapors
and gasses on cold and/or adsorbent
surfaces.
TURBOMOLECULAR
PUMP An axial flow turbine for operation
in the molecular flow range consisting of
a series of alternate circular rotor and
stator disks both of which have inclined
blades designed to impart momentum change
to gas molecules in a preferential
direction from the pump inlet to the
outlet.
TURBULENT
FLOW Gas flow at high pressures and
velocities, where the flow is not
laminar.
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VACUUM The
condition of gaseous environment in which
the gas pressure is below atmospheric
pressure. Generally classified in six
pressure ranges: Low vacuum 25 to 760
torr Medium vacuum 10-3 to 25 torr High
vacuum 10-6 to 10-3 torr Very high vacuum
10-9 to 10-6 torr Ultrahigh vacuum 10-12
to 10-9 torr Extreme ultrahigh vacuum
below 10-12 torr
VACUUM
CHAMBER The container or enclosure in a
vacuum system that is evacuated and in
which the process or experiment is
performed.
VACUUM
GAUGE An instrument for measuring gas
pressure below atmospheric pressure.
VACUUM
PUMP A device for reducing and
maintaining the gas pressure in a vessel
below atmospheric pressure, either by
transferring the gas molecules out into
the atmosphere or by capturing and
holding them on surfaces within the pump.
VACUUM
SYSTEM A complete assembly consisting of
the vacuum chamber, pumps, lines, valves
and monitoring instruments used to
conduct a vacuum process or experiment.
VALVE A
mechanical device by which the flow of
gas of vapor may be started, stopped, or
regulated by a moving part which opens or
obstructs a passage.
VAPOR The
gaseous phase of a substance that is
normally a solid or a liquid at room
temperature and atmospheric pressure.
VAPOR
PRESSURE Usually means saturated vapor
pressure; a fixed value at a particular
temperature for all substances.
VISCOUS
FLOW The flow of gas through a channel
under conditions such that the mean free
path is very small in comparison with the
smallest dimension of a transverse
section of the channel. At these
pressures the flow characteristics are
determined mainly by collisions between
the gas molecules. The flow may be
laminar or turbulent.
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