Oxygen-induced near-surface structural rearrangements on Ni{001} studied by shadow-cone-enhanced secondary-ion mass spectrometry

1994 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 4842-4849 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Xu ◽  
J. S. Burnham ◽  
S. H. Goss ◽  
K. Caffey ◽  
N. Winograd
1983 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Downing ◽  
R. F. Fleming ◽  
J. T. Maki ◽  
D. S. Simons ◽  
B. R. Stallard

ABSTRACTInformation relating the spatial arrangement and concentration of intentional and intrinsic dopants is commonly required to fully understand the properties of a material, whether the application is chemical, electrical, or physical. We have synergistically coupled the near-surface techniques of thermal neutron depth profiling (NDP) and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) for the purpose of better determining the distribution of a few key elements in a number of matrices and thin-film interfacial applications.The NDP facility, unique in the U.S., allows virtually non-destructive measurements of the absolute concentration of specific elements (e.g,, He, Be, Li, B, Na, Bi . . .) to be made versus their depth distribution in a specific matrix [1]. The quantitative information is derived from the number and the residual energy of emitted charged particles that are produced in situ by uniformly illuminating a sample volume with thermalized neutrons. Sensitivity, depth of view, and resolution are dependent upon the reaction cross-section for the element of interest and the characteristic energy loss for the elemental components of the matrix. However, experimental parameters, such as the sample angle relative to the detector, can be adjusted to extract the maximum depth or the best resolution information from the measurement [2]. Since the technique is non-destructive, samples can be subjected to a series of treatments and profiled after each step [3].The more mature SIMS technique is able to detect most of the elements listed above with greater relative sensitivity but without an absolute concentration calibration. Therefore, by utilizing the abundance information obtained by NDP, a concentration scale can be established for the SIMS profile. SIMS is also useful in probing smaller surface areas, a few tens of micrometers square as opposed to a few millimeters square for NDP. The advantage in coupling the two techniques lies principally with the role NDP plays in distinguishing experimental artifacts from real concentration variations [4]. While some matrices and interfacial areas of a sample give rise to variable sensitivities in SIMS measurements. NDP, however, counts every event that emitted a charged particle within the solid angle subtended by the detector, thereby, making it more reliable for reporting the concentration information.Shown in Figure 1 is a comparison of NDP and SIMS profiles determined for a boron-10 implant in a single-crystal silicon, a common processing step for semiconductor materials. The agreement between techniques is good. Possible sources of discrepancies between the two methods are briefly discussed by Ehrstein et al. [3].The combined effort of SIMS-NDP is currently being utilized to study diffusion and boundary segregation in thin-film semiconductor applications. Accurate depth profiles have been difficult to obtain by other analytical approaches for such material systems. The ability of SIMS-NDP to profile across interfacial regions and thin films will allow many other electrical devices and material problems to be addressed more reliably.


Author(s):  
Bruno Schueler ◽  
Robert W. Odom

Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) provides unique capabilities for elemental and molecular compositional analysis of a wide variety of surfaces. This relatively new technique is finding increasing applications in analyses concerned with determining the chemical composition of various polymer surfaces, identifying the composition of organic and inorganic residues on surfaces and the localization of molecular or structurally significant secondary ions signals from biological tissues. TOF-SIMS analyses are typically performed under low primary ion dose (static SIMS) conditions and hence the secondary ions formed often contain significant structural information.This paper will present an overview of current TOF-SIMS instrumentation with particular emphasis on the stigmatic imaging ion microscope developed in the authors’ laboratory. This discussion will be followed by a presentation of several useful applications of the technique for the characterization of polymer surfaces and biological tissues specimens. Particular attention in these applications will focus on how the analytical problem impacts the performance requirements of the mass spectrometer and vice-versa.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feifei Jia ◽  
Jie Wang ◽  
Yanyan Zhang ◽  
Qun Luo ◽  
Luyu Qi ◽  
...  

<p></p><p><i>In situ</i> visualization of proteins of interest at single cell level is attractive in cell biology, molecular biology and biomedicine, which usually involves photon, electron or X-ray based imaging methods. Herein, we report an optics-free strategy that images a specific protein in single cells by time of flight-secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) following genetic incorporation of fluorine-containing unnatural amino acids as a chemical tag into the protein via genetic code expansion technique. The method was developed and validated by imaging GFP in E. coli and human HeLa cancer cells, and then utilized to visualize the distribution of chemotaxis protein CheA in E. coli cells and the interaction between high mobility group box 1 protein and cisplatin damaged DNA in HeLa cells. The present work highlights the power of ToF-SIMS imaging combined with genetically encoded chemical tags for <i>in situ </i>visualization of proteins of interest as well as the interactions between proteins and drugs or drug damaged DNA in single cells.</p><p></p>


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