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XPS (X ray photoemission spectroscopy) /ESCA (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis)
46

XPS information

Dec 31, 2015

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This is a very interesting presentation about the XPS technique were you can have a general understanding of the concepts behind it.
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Page 1: XPS information

XPS (X ray photoemission spectroscopy)/ESCA (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis)

Page 2: XPS information

XPS

Core-levels: electroniccore-levels are more atomic-like: elementchemical shifts from formal oxidation state of the atom, the local chemical and physical environment : chemicallike Auger electron it has also short : surface sensitive Angular dependence has diffraction effects: structure Magnetic dichroism magnetic

Page 3: XPS information

Theoretical consideration

As photoemission is much more simple process than Auger process, conservation of energy then requires that : KE = h - ( E(A+ ) - E(A) ) - The final term in brackets,

representing the difference in energy between the ionized and neutral atoms, is generally called the binding energy (BE) of the electron . ( is the work function of the solid when KE is counted near surface, however, KE detected by analyzer then is the work function of analyzer.)

Page 4: XPS information

Z dependenceBE follows the energy levels: BE(1s)>BE(2s)>BE(2p)…BE with same orbital increase with Z: BE(Mg1s)>BE(Na1s)

Elemental specific!

XPS data base

Page 5: XPS information

Main features of XPS

Page 6: XPS information

Three Step Model

1. Absorption of the photon and excitation of electrons

2.Transport of electrons to the surface

3.The escape of the electrons from surface to the vacuum.

Page 7: XPS information

Inelastic scatteringIn the step 2, inelastic scattering let XPS spectra consists of core-level photo-emission peaks imposed by a step-like structure (background) due to the various mechanism to lose kinetic energy. Besides, there are also AES processes visible.

XPS peak fit

Page 8: XPS information

XPS peak identification

•Photoelectron lines: core-level, valence bands, spin-orbit splitting•Auger lines•Chemical shifts•X-ray satellites•X-ray “Ghost”•Shake-up satellite•Multiplet satellite•Energy loss lines

Page 9: XPS information

Spin-Orbit splitting:

Spin-orbit splitting is an initial state effect. For any electron in orbital with orbital angular momentum, coupling between magnetic fields of spin (s) and angular momentum (l) occurs

Lower binding energy

Higher binding energy

Page 10: XPS information

Total angular momentum j = |l ± s|, therefore for s electron there is no degeneracy, and other orbitals have two degeneracy:

- s orbitals are not spin-orbit split - singlet in XPS

- p, d, f… orbitals are spin-orbit split - doublets in XPS

- BE of lower j value in doublet is higher (BE 2p1/2 > BE 2p3/2)

- Magnitude of spin-orbit splitting increases with Z

- Magnitude of spin-orbit splitting decreases with distance from nucleus

(increased nuclear shielding) Intensity ratio?Intensity ratio?

Page 11: XPS information

Core Level Chemical ShiftsPosition of orbitals in atom is sensitive to chemical environment of atom. In solid all core levels for that atom shifted by approx. same amount (<10 eV). Chemical shift correlated with overall charge on atom (Reduced charge ®increased BE)For k-shell of an atom in a compound:

EB(k) = EB(k,qA) +Vwhere EB(k,qA) is the binding energy of a free ion, A, qA is the net charge of A, and V is the potential at A due to all other atoms. V can be described as:

V = e2qAqi/riA

(i is any other atoms except A), riA is the distance between i and A, therefore chemical shift is:

EB(k)=EB(k,qA1)-EB(k,qA2 )+V1 –V2

qA1 and qA2 is the difference of charge in two states.

Page 12: XPS information

XPS spectra for Si and its compounds with F in a) and chemical shifts vs. the charge in b)

Page 13: XPS information

Both S and Si binding energies increase with psitive charge (the loss of negative charge of electron), and the same for C.

FunctionalGroup

Binding Energy(eV)

hydrocarbon C-H, C -C 285.0

amine C-N 286.0

alcohol, ether C-O-H, C -O-C 286.5

Cl bound to C C-Cl 286.5

F bound to C C-F 287.8

carbonyl C=O 288.0

Page 14: XPS information

As the samples shown before, binding energies of Al3+ is higher than the metal atom, in the meanwhile, the binding energy of O atom (more positive charge) is higher than the O2- ion.

The chemical shifts due to the variation of the distribution of the charges at the atom site is the main reason for the other name of XPS:

ESCA (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis)

Page 15: XPS information

Shake-up and shake-off

Photoemission process can leave the ions in the ground state (main peak) and also possibly in an excited sate (shake-up/shake-off satellites), the latter makes the KE of photoelectron less: higher BE.- excitation of electron to bound state shake-up satellite- excitation of electron to unbound (continuum) state shake-off satellite- excitation of hole state shake-down satellite - rare

Page 16: XPS information

The shown is XPS

spectra for Cu 2p

photoemission at

different chemical

states. The shake-up

Lines does not exist

in Cu metal, and

is unique for CuO

And CuSO4

Page 17: XPS information

Some general rules

Shake-up features especially common in transition metal oxides associated with paramagnetic species. Generally, the shake-up/shake-off satellites have intensities and energy separations from the parent photoelectron line that are unique to each chemical state, which can be used to analyze the chemical state of the elements. Even Some Auger lines also exhibit changes due to these processes. With transition metal, the absence of these lines is the fingerprint for elemental or diamagnetic states. Prominent satellites occurs with paramagnetic states.

Page 18: XPS information

Multiplet splitting and shake-up/shake-off lines are generally expected in the paramagnetic states:

Page 19: XPS information

MnO XPS spectra

Chemical shifts are too small to distinguish the chemical states of Mn in MnO from a). In b) the satellites are due to Mn2+, while for Mn3+ and Mn4+, although there should be satellites, they are with higher binding energies.

Shake-up/Shake-off satellites are another reason for the chemical sensitivity of XPS

Page 20: XPS information

Multiplet satellite Following photoelectron emission, the remaining unpaired electron may couple with other unpaired electrons in the atom, resulting in an ion with several possible final state configurations with as many different energies. This produces a line which is split asymmetrically into several components.

For s-type orbital with other unpaired electrons in the atom there are split lines like in the shown Figure for Mn 3s.

For p or even higher orbital levels, is more complex and subtle

Page 21: XPS information

Energy loss lines

eph + esolid e*ph + e**solid

Photoelectrons travelling through the solid can interact with other electrons in the material. These interactions can result in the photoelectron exciting an electronic transition, thus losing some of its energy (inelastic scattering). Most common are due to interband or plasmons (bulk or surface).

Surface plasmon

(bulk plasmon)

Page 22: XPS information

The plasmon loss satellites are rarely sharp in insulators but very prominent in the metals. The main peak is normally observed at higher binding energy with several lines with the same energy intervals and reduced intensity, and the interval can be not only single one due to different origins: bulk or surface plasmons, bulk one is more prominent and interval larger (21/2 factor of the surface one).

Page 23: XPS information

Energy of LightWavelength() 106m 103m 1 m 10-3m 10-6m

Energy(E)

Bro

ad-

cast

Sh

ort

wav

e ra

dio

Infr

are

d

U VX

-ra

y

Gam

ma

Ray

Vis

ibl

e

1 MeV1 KeV1 eV10-3eV10-6eV

Page 24: XPS information

X-ray tubeEarly x-ray source

Standard lab X-ray source is by very high energy e beam hitting the anode.

Page 25: XPS information

A common Dual anode X-ray tube

Page 26: XPS information

X-ray spectrum from x-ray tube

Characteristic lines from the X ray fluorescence process (XRF) and a broad background (Bremsstrahlung), which is strongly depends on the energy of the electron

Page 27: XPS information

Typical X-ray anode material (Mg and Al)

2p3/2 1s and 2p1/2 1s transitions produce soft x-rays

K1,2 radiation (unresolved doublet)

h(eV) FWHM (eV)

Mg 1253.6 0.7

Al 1486.6 0.85

Same transitions in doubly ionized Mg or Al produce K3,4 lines at h~ 9-10 eV higher…

3p 1s transitions produce Kx-rays

Energies and widths of characteristic soft X-ray lines of different materials

Page 28: XPS information

Mg K-shell X-ray emission spectrum.

The full line shows the characteristic line emissions after subtraction of a constant background as shown by the dashed line. Note the logarithmic intensity scale.

Page 29: XPS information

X-ray satellites

Emission from non-monochromatic x-ray sources produces satellite peaks in XPS spectrum at lower BE.

Page 30: XPS information

“ghost peaks”

O Ka at 524.9 eV

Ghost peaks are due to contamination of the x-ray source, which produces x-ray emission at different wavelength and it can also due to contamination of the sample holder etc.

Page 31: XPS information

Monochromatic X-ray

1. Narrow peak width

2. Reduced background

3. No satellite & Ghost peaks

Goal to achieve

SampleSample

X-ray AnodeX-ray Anode

Energy Energy AnalyzerAnalyzer

Quartz Quartz Crystal DisperserCrystal Disperser

ee--

Rowland CircleRowland Circle

n=2dsinFor quartz (1010) surface, d=0.42 nm and 78.5 degree for Al K0.93 nm

Page 32: XPS information

Synchrotron Radiation

The synchrotron storage ring is a tubular vacuum chamber made to: Hold an electron beam travelling through it at nearly the speed of light. Maintain the high energy of the electron beam. As the accelerating electrons circle the ring at relativistic velocities, they give off intense beams of light including x-rays. By using a monochromator the light will be Monochromatic.

Key properties of synchrotron radiation:high intensitytunability in wide rangenear-coherencepolarized. pulsedwell collimated

NUS has such a source in Singapore!

Page 33: XPS information

Sample charging effects

The light for XPS always charges surface positively (shifting of spectrum to higher binding energy) and leads to general instability (spectral noise). For the metal sample, which can be grounded and the charges can be quickly gone. However, for insulator, this effects are serious and need to be treated.

C 1s shifts due to the charging

For XPS For XPS (even AES) (even AES) never forget never forget ground the ground the sample !!!sample !!!

Page 34: XPS information

Inhomogeneous Surface ChargingCharging can even change the line shape due to Inhomogeneous Surface Charging, which have different positive voltage on the surface.

In a lot of cases, there is only spectral shift due to charging, which can be determined by comparison with known elemental XPS lines, for example C 1s.

Page 35: XPS information

Charge CompensationWhen the spectra is distortedWhen the spectra is distorted

electron flood gun mounted line of sight with sample

electron flood gun mounted in analyzer axis + electromagnet

Which way is B field?Which way is B field?

Other methods including make the sample very thin that is does not insulate, earthed metal mesh and very focused X-ray spot can also help sometimes.

Page 36: XPS information

Quantitative analysis

X-ray X-ray penetrate penetrate much deep much deep than the than the escape depth escape depth of electronsof electrons

Page 37: XPS information

Can be found inCan be found inhandbookhandbook

Page 38: XPS information

How to measure the intensity

Lorentzian or Gaussian functions plus a background (or even more complicated functions) of E can be used to fit the peak to subtract the background. (More complicated Shirely background.)

Page 39: XPS information

Instrumentation (analyzers)

resolution

Acceptance angle

Analyzer: most essential part of any electron spectroscopy, its characteristic are: energy range, energy resolution, sensitivity and acceptance angle. Normally its functions involve: retarding of the incoming electron, selection of the electrons with right kinetic energy (pass energy), detecting of the electrons (channeltron)

Page 40: XPS information

Hemispherical Analyzer

5 4 . 7

X-rayX-raySourceSource

ElectronElectronOpticsOptics

Outer SphereOuter Sphere

Inner SphereInner Sphere

SampleSample

Analyzer ControlAnalyzer Control

Multi-Channel chanMulti-Channel channeltron Electron Mulneltron Electron Multipliertiplier

Most widely used for XPS

Page 41: XPS information

Hemispherical Analyzer

Pass energy: E = e U (b/a - a/b)

E/E = (x1+x2)/2r +2Resolution:

=(a+b)/2

U is the voltage difference between inner and outer sphere; a and b are radii of inner and outer spheres; x1 and x2 are the radii of the entrance and exits apertures, respectively; a is the maximum deviation of the electron trajectories at the entrance with respect to the center line.

Page 42: XPS information

Angular resolved XPSPhotoemission is a dipole interaction, its Hamilton can be write as:

Why?Why?

The transition possibility is:

with

Obviously the experimental geometry (the directions of the incident light and electron emission) is crucial to the photoemission process. Moreover, the electronic structure will be influenced by the presence of the surface, its possible influence will be present by the sample normal.

The change of emission angle with respect to the sample normal can also give different surface sensitivity.

The angular dependence of XPS is how the photoelectron diffraction (XPD) is done, which gives the structural information of the surface.

Page 43: XPS information

Angular resolved XPS

Various angular dependence

Page 44: XPS information

Surface sensitivity change due to angle and photon energy

More Surface More Surface SensitiveSensitive

less Surface less Surface SensitiveSensitive

Same path length but the depth different

Can be done aslo with AES!Can be done aslo with AES!

Page 45: XPS information

Sample for surface sensitivity change due to angle

For photoemission, Ekin = h - EB

Change of photon energy can change photoelectron energy that also changes the free path length of the photoelectrons(surface sensitivity).

CannotCannot be done with AES! be done with AES!

Page 46: XPS information

AES vs. XPS

1. Common points

2. difference

•Both elemental and chemical sensitive•Both can be used to do quantitative analysis of chemical composition.•Both are electron spectroscopy which have surface sensitivity.

AES: involved two electrons and one hole, due to coulomb interaction (no selection rule), complicated, peak broad, can be excited by many energetic particles including photon, no intrinsic angular dependence, commonly use CMA, AES peak in XPS spectra is with fixed Ekin.

XPS: involved in one electron, due to dipole interaction (selection rule), peak sharp, simple, only excited by photon, sensitive to angular geometry, often use angular resolved analyzer, XPS peak is with fixed binding energy.