Title: Electron probe microanalysis EPMA
1Electron probe microanalysisEPMA
- Thin Film Analysis
- and Particles
2Whats the point?
EPMA is traditionally done for bulk material.
What are the issues for thin films? How
precise/accurate are such analyses? Can
unpolished particles be analyzed by WDS or EDS?
3Bulk vs thin film
- Normal EPMA assumes that the electron beam is
exciting a homogeneous volume, i.e. there is no
difference either laterally or vertically. Thus,
the matrix correction is being applied in a
uniform matter, and there is one applicable f(rz)
profile for each element . - As research has improved the accuracy of the
f(rz) profiles, it is now possible to take thin
films (including multiple films) and apply f(rz)
models and calculate best fits for unknown
parameters. For example, if you know that there
is a TiO2 skin atop your Ti metal, you can
acquire Ti and O X-ray counts at several E0
values, and then try to match them by modeling
various film thicknesses with 3rd party software
programs. Or if you have been able to measure a
film thickness, you could determine what the
phase stoichometry is.
4MC Simulation TiO2 on Ti
It can be helpful to run Monte Carlo simulations
of thin films. Here, the new Casino software is
used to model 15 keV electrons hitting a 1 mm
layer of TiO2 on Ti. Red trajectories to top left
are BSEs. At bottom left is a model of the O Ka
f(rz) profile (blue), plus the profile of X-rays
predicted to escape (red) and get to the detector.
Here the range of various energy incident
electrons are modeled.
5Thin Film Software
Thin films can be studied with the electron
microprobe, although the acquired data cannot be
run through the normal probe software (which only
works for homogeneous volumes). Standard counts
are acquired on normal standards, and then
K-ratios acquired from the thin films at several
E0 values (minimally 3, preferably more e.g. 5,
10, 15 keV). There are two software packages the
costly STRATAGem, above left (6K) and the
freeware GMRFilm (below written by R.Waldo of GM
). STRATA-Gem is very slick and has a Windows
interface, whereas GMRFilm runs under DOS and
requires manual tabulating. In the bottom
example, we see that a 0.1 mm oxide coat on Ti
robs the metal of 6 of the Ti Ka counts it
should yield.
6Oxygen on Boron metal (2 standards)
This and the next slide demonstrate the utility
of thin film software. We needed to verify that
our boron standard was pure, but there was a
small peak at O ka. I ran it at 2, 3, 7 15 keV
(red and black symbols), and then tested various
interpretations of the data. Oxygen as bulk did
not fit, whereas a 12Ã… oxide film did.
Experiment
Models
Not bulk, but 12 Ã… film B2O3 (2 different Boron
standards)
Thin film modeled with GMRfilm
7Carbon on Boron metal
Not bulk, but 12-18 Ã… C film (2 different Boron
standards)
Thin film modeled with GMRfilm
8Particles - 1
- Mass effect/error electrons escape from sides
of small particles if E0 is large enough (left) - Absorption effect of non-flat upper surface
different path length from normal flat geometry
(middle) - Variable effect of geometry of trajectory
between beam impact area on non-uniform surface
and the location of the detector (right)
Goldstein et al, 1992, p. 479, 481
9Particles - 2
- Traditional approach normalize numbers but
this is not very good (above left table) - Armstrong and Buseck (1975) developed a
procedure based upon a regular geometric shape
factor, where the different path length and other
effects could be used. Method is based on
bracketing particle and beam overscanning during
collection of spectrum by EDS and modeling of
electron path and x-ray propagation out through
several shapes sphere, hemisphere, squared
pyramid, and rectangular, tetragonal, cylindrical
and right triangular prisms. Correction factors
are given in terms of predicted k-factors for
pairs of particular elements, vs particle
thickness along e beam. This is not easy, takes
much trial and error, but apparently can yield
fairly good results (see table above).
Goldstein et al, 1992, p. 488, 489