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Anal Bioanal Chem. 1996 Jul;355(7):840-6. doi: 10.1007/s0021663550840.

Quantitative depth profiling in glow discharge spectroscopies - A new deconvolution technique to separate effects of an uneven erosion crater shape.

Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry

F Prässler, V Hoffmann, J Schumann, K Wetzig

Affiliations

  1. Institut für Festkörper- und Werkstofforschung Dresden e.V., Postfach 27 00 16, D-01171, Dresden, Germany.

PMID: 15045276 DOI: 10.1007/s0021663550840

Abstract

An algorithm is presented as a concept for the quantification in direct current and radiofrequency glow discharge (GD) modes for GD optical emission spectroscopy. The algorithm is divided into excitation and sputtering part and thus it is possible to distinguish between the different excitation processes and to consider equivalent sputtering crater formations in both modes. Intensity-time profiles are affected corresponding to the method by several effects. One important effect is that sputtering occurs at a single time in different depths because of curved crater bottoms, this is usually called crater effect. The main purpose is to introduce an iterative deconvolution technique which for the quantification numerically takes into account the curved sputtering crater bottom. Input data for the deconvolution technique are the calibrated mass-time profile, the partial densities of the sample constituents and the measured final shape of the sputtering crater. Using a relatively simple model for ion sputtering the deconvolution technique improves iteratively the calculated layer structure by means of information on crater formation. The mathematical handling is illustrated for the quantification of a depth profile of a multilayer sample of ten 100 nm layers. The resulting concentration-depth profile reflects excellently the real elemental distribution of the multilayer system.

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