AI Article Synopsis

  • A new method has been developed to maintain constant gas pressure in in situ measurements, specifically demonstrated in a high-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy system.
  • By using the pressure of a differential stage as feedback to adjust the sample's position, the technique achieves remarkable consistency within a few hundred nanometers, outperforming typical optical microscopy limits.
  • This method effectively compensates for thermal drift and allows continuous data acquisition while heating the sample, maintaining pressure within 5% variation even during significant gas flow changes.

Article Abstract

We present a new method to maintain constant gas pressure over a sample during in situ measurements. The example shown here is a differentially pumped high-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy system, but this technique could be applied to many in situ instruments. By using the pressure of the differential stage as a feedback source to change the sample position, a new level of consistency has been achieved. Depending on the absolute value of the sample-to-aperture distance, this technique allows one to maintain the distance within several hundred nanometers, which is below the limit of typical optical microscopy systems. We show that this method is well suited to compensate for thermal drift. Thus, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy data can be acquired continuously while the sample is heated and maintaining constant pressure over the sample. By implementing a precise manipulator feedback system, pressure variations of less than 5% were reached while the temperature was varied by 400 ℃. The system is also shown to be highly stable under significant changes in gas flow. After changing the flow by a factor of two, the pressure returned to the set value within 60 s.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7859668PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0003702820942798DOI Listing

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