WO2005091330A2 - Louvered beam stop for lowering x-ray limit of a total pressure gauge - Google Patents

Louvered beam stop for lowering x-ray limit of a total pressure gauge Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2005091330A2
WO2005091330A2 PCT/US2002/011321 US0211321W WO2005091330A2 WO 2005091330 A2 WO2005091330 A2 WO 2005091330A2 US 0211321 W US0211321 W US 0211321W WO 2005091330 A2 WO2005091330 A2 WO 2005091330A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
electron beam
beam stop
ion
louvers
gas
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2002/011321
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2005091330A3 (en
Inventor
Robert E. Ellefson
Louis C. Frees
Original Assignee
Inficon, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Inficon, Inc. filed Critical Inficon, Inc.
Priority to JP2005518088A priority Critical patent/JP4252064B2/en
Priority to DE60233607T priority patent/DE60233607D1/en
Priority to PCT/US2002/011321 priority patent/WO2005091330A2/en
Priority to EP02808369A priority patent/EP1611593B1/en
Publication of WO2005091330A2 publication Critical patent/WO2005091330A2/en
Publication of WO2005091330A3 publication Critical patent/WO2005091330A3/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J41/00Discharge tubes for measuring pressure of introduced gas or for detecting presence of gas; Discharge tubes for evacuation by diffusion of ions
    • H01J41/02Discharge tubes for measuring pressure of introduced gas or for detecting presence of gas
    • H01J41/04Discharge tubes for measuring pressure of introduced gas or for detecting presence of gas with ionisation by means of thermionic cathodes

Definitions

  • This invention pertains to the field of ionizing gas samples for analysis, and in particular to reducing the residual current in an ionization gauge due to the X-ray effect by using a louvered beam stop.
  • the low pressure measurement limit of total pressure gauges is largely limited by the generation of x-rays when electrons strike grid surfaces in the gauge structure.
  • the x-rays generated have a cosine squared distribution of intensities leaving the surface.
  • the effect of X-rays emitted when a collimated electron beam strikes grid surfaces in the gauge structure is reduced by a louvered beam stop.
  • the louvered beam stop creates shadow regions having no X-rays, thus minimizing the amount of X-rays striking the collector plate and reducing the X-ray effect portion of the residual current.
  • the beam stop in an ionization gauge having an electron beam shaped by an anode, in which gas molecules are ionized by the electron beam for analysis, and a beam stop which collects substantially all electrons in the electron beam not interacting with the gas molecules, the beam stop includes a plurality of louvers on the beam stop.
  • an apparatus for determining a total ion pressure of a gas includes an ionization chamber; the ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between the regions is defined by an anode grid; means for producing an electron beam passing through the first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and molecules of the gas within the ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; means for directing the first ion stream to an analyzer; and means for directing the second ion stream to an ion collector.
  • a method for determining a total ion pressure of a gas includes (a) providing an ionization chamber, the ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between the regions is defined by an anode grid; (b) producing an electron beam passing through the first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and molecules of the gas within the ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; (c) using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; (d) directing the first ion stream to an analyzer; and (e) directing the second ion stream to an ion collector.
  • a method for reducing a residual current in an ionization gauge includes (a) providing an ionization chamber containing gas molecules of a gas to be analyzed; (b) producing an electron beam passing through the ionization chamber, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and the gas molecules within the ionization chamber produce at least one ion stream; (c) directing at least a portion of the ion stream to an ion collector; and (d) using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers, wherein the louvers direct a plurality of X-rays formed by the electrons interacting with the electron beam stop away from the ion collector.
  • Fig. 1 shows a cross-sectional view of a portion of an ionization gauge according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 shows a side view of a portion of the ionization gauge of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 shows a total pressure ion current measured with a flat electron beam stop of the prior art compared with a total pressure ion current measured with a louvered electron beam stop of the present invention.
  • an ionization gauge 8 is shown in which an electron beam 10 is emitted from a filament 12.
  • the electrons in electron beam 10 are focused by a three-sided repeller 14 which is mounted such that a center of filament 12 is preferably at the center of diagonals drawn from the corners of repeller 14.
  • Repeller 14 is connected to the negative side of filament 12, thus making repeller 14 more negative than the potential of emitted electrons by an amount equal to the filament voltage with respect to the negative lead at the point the electron is emitted. This is approximately one-half the voltage across the filament (-1.5 N).
  • the electrons in electron beam 10 are drawn to an anode 16, preferably a square anode, by a voltage that is positive with respect to filament 12.
  • Anode 16 is preferably biased at 70 N.
  • Anode 16 separates a first region (partial pressure) 20 from a second region (total pressure) 22.
  • Electron beam 10 forms ions in both the first and second regions 20, 22.
  • a plurality of ions 30 from first region 20 are extracted by a focus lens 24 and directed to a mass analysis device (not shown), where they form ion currents proportional to pressures of gas components in region 20.
  • a plurality of ions 32 from second region 22 are collected by an ion collection device, such as a collector plate 26, to produce a current proportional to the total pressure of gas components in second region 22.
  • the electrons in electron beam 10 continue through first and second regions 20, 22 and impact on a beam stop 28.
  • Anode 16 and beam stop 28 together function as an anode for electron beam 10, resulting in the path of electrons in electron beam 10 being perpendicular to the equipotential lines established by the structure, thus resulting in a focused beam.
  • beam stop 28 some of the energy can generate electromagnetic radiation in the form of X-rays 34.
  • These X-rays 34 have a cosine squared distribution of intensities leaving the surface. If some of these energetic photons strike collector plate 26, an electron is emitted from collector plate 26.
  • X-ray limit At low pressures, we focus on controlling the direction that X-rays 34 are emitted when collimated electron beam 10 strikes electron beam stop 28.
  • the ion collector element, collector plate 26, is placed in the shadow of x-rays 34 and thus minimizes the x-ray current.
  • a plurality of louvers 36 in beam stop 28 controls the direction of the emitted X-rays 34. Louvers 36 preferably are in the portion of beam stop 28 that is approximately +/- 20 degrees from the central axis of electron beam 10.
  • the angle of louvers 36 is preferably 30-45 degrees from the vertical plane of beam stop 28 as shown in Fig. 2.
  • X-rays 34 are produced whose energy is less than the electron energy and whose angle of emission from the surface of louvers 36 of beam stop 28 is a cosine-squared distribution about an axis normal to each louver 36.
  • This design minimizes the number of X-rays emitted parallel to louvers 36, thus creating a shadowed region with no x-rays behind each plate and behind a line extending parallel to each angled plate. Collectively the effect is to minimize x-rays striking the collector plate 26.
  • collector plate 26 The dimensions of collector plate 26 are designed to be in the shadowed region and yet create the necessary field to efficiently attract and collect ions.
  • Fig. 3 the ion current measured vs pressure for the total pressure collector with a flat beam stop is shown. Note that below 2E-8 Torr the output ion current is constant at IE- 10 A. Also shown in Fig. 3 is the ion current vs pressure for the louvered beam stop of the present invention. The extension of a linear response to the ion current is clearly shown.

Landscapes

  • Measuring Fluid Pressure (AREA)
  • X-Ray Techniques (AREA)

Abstract

In an ionization gauge, the effect of X-rays emitted when a collimated electron beam strikes grid surfaces in the gauge structure is reduced by a louvered beam stop. The louvered beam stop creates shadow regions having no X-rays, thus minimizing the amount of X-rays striking the collector plate and reducing the X-ray effect portion of the residual current.

Description

LOUVERED BEAM STOP FOR LOWERING X-RAY LIMIT OF A TOTAL PRESSURE GAUGE
FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention pertains to the field of ionizing gas samples for analysis, and in particular to reducing the residual current in an ionization gauge due to the X-ray effect by using a louvered beam stop.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The low pressure measurement limit of total pressure gauges is largely limited by the generation of x-rays when electrons strike grid surfaces in the gauge structure. The x-rays generated have a cosine squared distribution of intensities leaving the surface.
Some of these energetic photons can strike the total pressure collector and eject an electron from the ion collector. This loss of an electron is indistinguishable from the arrival of an ion at the collector. Thus, the photoelectron ejection is recorded as an ion current which at very low pressures produces an "X-ray limit" for low pressure for any gauge. This X-ray limit is particularly high for the triode type of ion gauge where the collector surface is a cylinder around the central filament and grid. Prior art in minimizing this problem includes: 1. Making the total pressure collector a very fine wire to minimize the area for x-ray absorption (the Bayard-Alpert Ion Gauge - (BAG), 2. Modulating the ion collection to reject photoelectron effects (Modulated
BAG), 3. Extracting the ions formed in a gauge through an aperture to a separate collection region using a modulated ion repeller (The Extractor Gauge of Redhead, et al.), and 4. Extracting the ions and bending them with an electrostatic analyzer to an ion collector (The Helmer Gauge). All of these gauges focus on minimizing the incidence of the x-rays present in a standard cylindrical grid structure by designing a particular size and location of the collector element or modulating the ion collection process.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION Briefly stated, in an ionization gauge, the effect of X-rays emitted when a collimated electron beam strikes grid surfaces in the gauge structure is reduced by a louvered beam stop. The louvered beam stop creates shadow regions having no X-rays, thus minimizing the amount of X-rays striking the collector plate and reducing the X-ray effect portion of the residual current. According to an embodiment of the invention, in an ionization gauge having an electron beam shaped by an anode, in which gas molecules are ionized by the electron beam for analysis, and a beam stop which collects substantially all electrons in the electron beam not interacting with the gas molecules, the beam stop includes a plurality of louvers on the beam stop. According to an embodiment of the invention, an apparatus for determining a total ion pressure of a gas includes an ionization chamber; the ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between the regions is defined by an anode grid; means for producing an electron beam passing through the first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and molecules of the gas within the ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; means for directing the first ion stream to an analyzer; and means for directing the second ion stream to an ion collector. According to an embodiment of the invention, a method for determining a total ion pressure of a gas includes (a) providing an ionization chamber, the ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between the regions is defined by an anode grid; (b) producing an electron beam passing through the first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and molecules of the gas within the ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; (c) using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; (d) directing the first ion stream to an analyzer; and (e) directing the second ion stream to an ion collector. According to an embodiment of the invention, a method for reducing a residual current in an ionization gauge includes (a) providing an ionization chamber containing gas molecules of a gas to be analyzed; (b) producing an electron beam passing through the ionization chamber, whereby an interaction between the electron beam and the gas molecules within the ionization chamber produce at least one ion stream; (c) directing at least a portion of the ion stream to an ion collector; and (d) using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with the gas molecules, the electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers, wherein the louvers direct a plurality of X-rays formed by the electrons interacting with the electron beam stop away from the ion collector.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Fig. 1 shows a cross-sectional view of a portion of an ionization gauge according to an embodiment of the present invention. Fig. 2 shows a side view of a portion of the ionization gauge of Fig. 1. Fig. 3 shows a total pressure ion current measured with a flat electron beam stop of the prior art compared with a total pressure ion current measured with a louvered electron beam stop of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring to Figs. 1-2, an ionization gauge 8 is shown in which an electron beam 10 is emitted from a filament 12. The electrons in electron beam 10 are focused by a three-sided repeller 14 which is mounted such that a center of filament 12 is preferably at the center of diagonals drawn from the corners of repeller 14. Repeller 14 is connected to the negative side of filament 12, thus making repeller 14 more negative than the potential of emitted electrons by an amount equal to the filament voltage with respect to the negative lead at the point the electron is emitted. This is approximately one-half the voltage across the filament (-1.5 N). The electrons in electron beam 10 are drawn to an anode 16, preferably a square anode, by a voltage that is positive with respect to filament 12. Anode 16 is preferably biased at 70 N. Anode 16 separates a first region (partial pressure) 20 from a second region (total pressure) 22. Electron beam 10 forms ions in both the first and second regions 20, 22. A plurality of ions 30 from first region 20 are extracted by a focus lens 24 and directed to a mass analysis device (not shown), where they form ion currents proportional to pressures of gas components in region 20. A plurality of ions 32 from second region 22 are collected by an ion collection device, such as a collector plate 26, to produce a current proportional to the total pressure of gas components in second region 22. The electrons in electron beam 10 continue through first and second regions 20, 22 and impact on a beam stop 28. Anode 16 and beam stop 28 together function as an anode for electron beam 10, resulting in the path of electrons in electron beam 10 being perpendicular to the equipotential lines established by the structure, thus resulting in a focused beam. When electrons traverse first and second regions 20, 22, they have a typical energy of 70 eN. When these electrons strike beam stop 28, some of the energy can generate electromagnetic radiation in the form of X-rays 34. These X-rays 34 have a cosine squared distribution of intensities leaving the surface. If some of these energetic photons strike collector plate 26, an electron is emitted from collector plate 26. Because this loss of an electron is indistinguishable from the arrival of an ion, the event is recorded as ion current, which at very low pressures, produces an "X-ray limit" at low pressures for any gauge. In our invention for minimizing the low pressure x-ray limit, we focus on controlling the direction that X-rays 34 are emitted when collimated electron beam 10 strikes electron beam stop 28. The ion collector element, collector plate 26, is placed in the shadow of x-rays 34 and thus minimizes the x-ray current. A plurality of louvers 36 in beam stop 28 controls the direction of the emitted X-rays 34. Louvers 36 preferably are in the portion of beam stop 28 that is approximately +/- 20 degrees from the central axis of electron beam 10. The angle of louvers 36 is preferably 30-45 degrees from the vertical plane of beam stop 28 as shown in Fig. 2. When electron beam 10 strikes louvered beam stop 28, X-rays 34 are produced whose energy is less than the electron energy and whose angle of emission from the surface of louvers 36 of beam stop 28 is a cosine-squared distribution about an axis normal to each louver 36. This design minimizes the number of X-rays emitted parallel to louvers 36, thus creating a shadowed region with no x-rays behind each plate and behind a line extending parallel to each angled plate. Collectively the effect is to minimize x-rays striking the collector plate 26. The dimensions of collector plate 26 are designed to be in the shadowed region and yet create the necessary field to efficiently attract and collect ions. Referring to Fig. 3, the ion current measured vs pressure for the total pressure collector with a flat beam stop is shown. Note that below 2E-8 Torr the output ion current is constant at IE- 10 A. Also shown in Fig. 3 is the ion current vs pressure for the louvered beam stop of the present invention. The extension of a linear response to the ion current is clearly shown. While the present invention has been described with reference to a particular preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the preferred embodiment and that various modifications and the like could be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.

Claims

What is claimed is: 1. In an ionization gauge having an electron beam shaped by an anode, in which gas molecules are ionized by said electron beam for analysis, and a beam stop which collects substantially all electrons in said electron beam not interacting with said gas molecules, said beam stop comprising a plurality of louvers on said beam stop.
2. A beam stop according to claim 1, wherein said plurality of louvers are only on a central portion of said beam stop.
3. A beam stop according to claim 1, wherein said plurality of louvers are angled between 30 and 45 degrees from a vertical plane of said beam stop.
4. An apparatus for determining a total ion pressure of a gas, comprising: an ionization chamber; said ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between said regions is defined by an anode grid; means for producing an electron beam passing through said first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between said electron beam and molecules of said gas within said ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with said gas molecules, said electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; means for directing said first ion stream to an analyzer; and means for directing said second ion stream to an ion collector.
5. An apparatus according to claim 4, further comprising: means for collecting said first ion stream at said ion collector; means for measuring a reference current produced by said second ion stream at said ion collector; and means, using said reference current, for calculating said total ion pressure of said gas within said ionization chamber.
6. An apparatus according to claim 4, wherein said plurality of louvers are only on a central portion of said beam stop.
7. An apparatus according to claim 6, wherein said plurality of louvers are angled between 30 and 45 degrees from a vertical plane of said beam stop.
8. An apparatus according to claim 4, wherein said plurality of louvers are angled between 30 and 45 degrees from a vertical plane of said beam stop.
9. A method for determining a total ion pressure of a gas, comprising the steps of: providing an ionization chamber, said ionization chamber having first and second ionization regions, wherein a boundary between said regions is defined by an anode grid; producing an electron beam passing through said first and second ionization regions, whereby an interaction between said electron beam and molecules of said gas within said ionization chamber produce first and second ion streams from a same gas density; using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with said gas molecules, said electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers; directing said first ion stream to an analyzer; and directing said second ion stream to an ion collector.
10. A method for reducing a residual current in an ionization gauge, comprising the steps of: providing an ionization chamber containing gas molecules of a gas to be analyzed; producing an electron beam passing through said ionization chamber, whereby an interaction between said electron beam and said gas molecules within said ionization chamber produce at least one ion stream; directing at least a portion of said ion stream to an ion collector; and using an electron beam stop which collects substantially all electrons not interacting with said gas molecules, said electron beam stop including a plurality of louvers, wherein said louvers direct a plurality of X-rays formed by said electrons interacting with said electron beam stop away from said ion collector.
PCT/US2002/011321 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Louvered beam stop for lowering x-ray limit of a total pressure gauge WO2005091330A2 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2005518088A JP4252064B2 (en) 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Beam stop with slats to reduce the X-ray limit of all pressure gauges
DE60233607T DE60233607D1 (en) 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Ionization meter and method for determining a total ion pressure
PCT/US2002/011321 WO2005091330A2 (en) 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Louvered beam stop for lowering x-ray limit of a total pressure gauge
EP02808369A EP1611593B1 (en) 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Ionization Gauge and Method for Determining a Total Ion Pressure

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2002/011321 WO2005091330A2 (en) 2002-05-28 2002-05-28 Louvered beam stop for lowering x-ray limit of a total pressure gauge

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WO2005091330A2 true WO2005091330A2 (en) 2005-09-29
WO2005091330A3 WO2005091330A3 (en) 2005-11-10

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JP (1) JP4252064B2 (en)
DE (1) DE60233607D1 (en)
WO (1) WO2005091330A2 (en)

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2011040625A1 (en) * 2009-09-29 2011-04-07 有限会社真空実験室 Vacuum measuring device having ion source

Citations (6)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB185834A (en) * 1921-06-10 1922-09-11 George Chappell Minnitt Improvements in or relating to louvre window or like shutters
US2820946A (en) * 1954-02-01 1958-01-21 Cons Electrodynamics Corp Apparatus for leak detection and pressure measurement
GB1194943A (en) * 1967-04-21 1970-06-17 Battelle Development Corp Gauge for Measuring the Rate of Evaporation of Substances in an Evacuated Enclosure
US3971359A (en) * 1975-04-14 1976-07-27 Richard Curtis Bourne Louvered selective solar energy collector
US5889281A (en) * 1997-03-21 1999-03-30 Leybold Inficon, Inc. Method for linearization of ion currents in a quadrupole mass analyzer
US6187359B1 (en) * 1999-05-12 2001-02-13 Anthony Mark Zuccarini Method and apparatus for baking foods in a barbeque grill

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2834280A (en) * 1954-02-10 1958-05-13 Robertson Co H H Louver

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB185834A (en) * 1921-06-10 1922-09-11 George Chappell Minnitt Improvements in or relating to louvre window or like shutters
US2820946A (en) * 1954-02-01 1958-01-21 Cons Electrodynamics Corp Apparatus for leak detection and pressure measurement
GB1194943A (en) * 1967-04-21 1970-06-17 Battelle Development Corp Gauge for Measuring the Rate of Evaporation of Substances in an Evacuated Enclosure
US3971359A (en) * 1975-04-14 1976-07-27 Richard Curtis Bourne Louvered selective solar energy collector
US5889281A (en) * 1997-03-21 1999-03-30 Leybold Inficon, Inc. Method for linearization of ion currents in a quadrupole mass analyzer
US6187359B1 (en) * 1999-05-12 2001-02-13 Anthony Mark Zuccarini Method and apparatus for baking foods in a barbeque grill

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP1611593A2 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE60233607D1 (en) 2009-10-15
EP1611593B1 (en) 2009-09-02
JP2006510036A (en) 2006-03-23
JP4252064B2 (en) 2009-04-08
EP1611593A2 (en) 2006-01-04
WO2005091330A3 (en) 2005-11-10

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