Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Rare and modern books

Peter Sigmund.

Theory of Sputtering. I. Sputtering Yield of Amorphous and Polycrystalline Targets.

100.00 €

Cellerino Luigi Studio Bibliografico

(Alessandria, Italy)

Ask for more info

Payment methods

Details

Author
Peter Sigmund.
Edition
First edition.
Binding description
Original printed wrappers.
Languages
Italian
First edition
Yes

Description

In THE PHYSICAL REVIEW, Vol. 184, N. 2, 10 August 1969, pp. 383-416, and Vol. 187, N. 2, 10 November 1969, pp. 768 (Errata), two entire issues in original printed wrappers. Very fine copies, ownership inscriptions, spine of vol 184 slightly curled. FIRST EDITION. “In June1964,I attended an international summer school on atomic collisions in solids at Strandkrogen,Fakse Ladeplads,Denmark.It was a small school, but the best I ever attended: Hans Henrik Andersen and I made up the organizing committee, the lecturers, and the audience. One of the topics we learned a lot about was Silbee focusons, i.e., collision chains propagating along crystal lattice rows. They seemed important in radiation damage, but their verification was drawn from ejection patterns in sputtering experiments. “Following a suggestion by Jens Lindhard, I had a closer look at the sputtering literature. Theoretical work with Christian Lehmann at Jülich revealed that surprisingly little had been learned about focusons from sputtering experiments. “Our paper was received with significant disbelief. During my visit to Amsterdam, Jaap Kistemaker expressed doubts as to whether we could account for measured sputtering rates without invoking long-range mass transport. Obviously, a transport calculation had to be done to predict sputtering rates from first principles. “From Lindhard and his group, and from several others, I had learned a lot about the slowing down of atoms in solids, and a long cold winter at Argonne National Laboratory gave me time and patienceenough to go through the whole thing. “One significant reward came right after my talk at a Cordon conference in 1968 where I reported on my findings: I was offered a big Dutch cigar by Kistemaker. I had never tried one before,but survived. “I had a suspicion that my work was going to be useful, although hardly anybody at the time could anticipate the wealth of applications of sputtering phenomena that since have come up in microelectronics, surface analysis, and astrophysics, to mention just three. Anyhow, I spent an extra winter trying to generate a decent write-up. I wanted to include everything an experimentalist would need to generate useful numbers. In addition, I aimed at optimal documentation. This strategy was apparently appropriate. I have since written papers which, I think, were more clever, but where I left it up to the readers to extract results and to draw some of the conclusions. Perhaps I should not have done that. “The paper got a bit long, so I found it necessary to divide it into three parts. Only Part I ever got finished. I am still keeping all the request cards that I received for Parts II and Ill, for possible future use. While the paper went smoothly throug the reviewing process, it went even too smoothly through the printing. In fact, I never received proofs. Thanks to professional printers and to a carefully typed manuscript, the number of essential printing errors on 34pages turned out to be minimal." ( http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1983/A1983QD89800001.pdf ).