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A study of the photodesorption process for cryosorbed layers of H2, CH4, CO or CO2 at various temperatures between 3 and 68 K

✍ Scribed by V.V. Anashin; O.B. Malyshev; R. Calder; O. Gröbner


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
127 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
0042-207X

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✦ Synopsis


The vacuum performance of the large hadron collider (LHC) at CERN will depend critically on the photodesorption of gas by synchrotron radiation and the re-adsorption of these molecules back onto the cold surface. The results of photon-induced molecular desorption by synchrotron radiation with a critical photon energy of 284 eV for H , CH , CO or CO cryosorbed on a stainless steel surface are presented. Most measurements have been carried out in a temperature range from about 3 to 20 K. Measurements for CO were also performed at 68 K. The specific method used for this study has been to pre-deposit a known quantity of gas onto a cold surface, to irradiate the surface with a known photon dose and to measure the quantity of gas remaining on the cold surface by recording the pressure during warm-up. The average photodesorption yields of all gas species were found to increase with increasing surface coverage and to reach a saturation value. For H this value is approximately 0.5 for a coverage exceeding 10 molecules/cm, for CH and CO saturation occurs at about 0.5 molecules/photon at &10 molecules/cm, while the corresponding final value for CO is about 0.04 molecules/photon at this coverage.