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The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES

Some cleaning methods for 316 L+N stainless steel including solvent cleaning, high temperature treatment in vacuo and gas discharge cleaning have been studied by SIMS and AES with a view to providing a clean vacuum chamber surface with low gas desorption under ion bombardment. After solvent cleaning...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Mathewson, A G
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1974
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0042-207X(74)90017-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/314277
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author Mathewson, A G
author_facet Mathewson, A G
author_sort Mathewson, A G
collection CERN
description Some cleaning methods for 316 L+N stainless steel including solvent cleaning, high temperature treatment in vacuo and gas discharge cleaning have been studied by SIMS and AES with a view to providing a clean vacuum chamber surface with low gas desorption under ion bombardment. After solvent cleaning the main surface contaminant was found to be C and its associated compounds. Laboratory investigations on small samples of stainless steel showed that clean surfaces could be obtained by heating in vacuo to 800 degrees C followed by exposure to air and by argon or argon/10% oxygen discharge cleaning. Due to a cross contamination within the vacuum system, the 800 degrees C treated chamber gave positive desorption coefficients under ion bombardment. The pure argon discharge cleaned chambers proved stable giving negative desorption coefficients up to 2200 eV ion energy even after several weeks storage discharge treatment and installation. (10 refs).
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 1974
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spelling cern-3142772023-04-21T09:45:15Zdoi:10.1016/0042-207X(74)90017-7http://cds.cern.ch/record/314277engMathewson, A GThe surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AESAccelerators and Storage RingsSome cleaning methods for 316 L+N stainless steel including solvent cleaning, high temperature treatment in vacuo and gas discharge cleaning have been studied by SIMS and AES with a view to providing a clean vacuum chamber surface with low gas desorption under ion bombardment. After solvent cleaning the main surface contaminant was found to be C and its associated compounds. Laboratory investigations on small samples of stainless steel showed that clean surfaces could be obtained by heating in vacuo to 800 degrees C followed by exposure to air and by argon or argon/10% oxygen discharge cleaning. Due to a cross contamination within the vacuum system, the 800 degrees C treated chamber gave positive desorption coefficients under ion bombardment. The pure argon discharge cleaned chambers proved stable giving negative desorption coefficients up to 2200 eV ion energy even after several weeks storage discharge treatment and installation. (10 refs).CERN-ISR-VA-74-30CERN-ISR-VA-74-30ISR-VA-74-30oai:cds.cern.ch:3142771974-05-30
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Mathewson, A G
The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title_full The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title_fullStr The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title_full_unstemmed The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title_short The surface cleanliness of 316 L + N stainless steel studied by SIMS and AES
title_sort surface cleanliness of 316 l + n stainless steel studied by sims and aes
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0042-207X(74)90017-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/314277
work_keys_str_mv AT mathewsonag thesurfacecleanlinessof316lnstainlesssteelstudiedbysimsandaes
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