Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB VACUUM TECHNOLOGY G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 12.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB VACUUM TECHNOLOGY G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 12."— Presentation transcript:

1 PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB VACUUM TECHNOLOGY G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 12

2 INTRODUCTION Humans work in a gaseous environment. Although less dense than solids or liquids, the normal gas environment greatly influences much physics. Often, to do interesting and important physics, one must get rid of it.

3 WHAT IS A VACUUM ? The absence of appreciable matter (i.e., atoms, molecules, ions, particles), usually as gas. How do we measure the amount of gas?  As mechanical pressure on container walls or neighbouring gas. Pressure = Force /unit area = N/m 2 = Pa (SIU); = bars (cgs) = psi (USA/Imperial); = Atm (Chem); = mmHg = Torr (traditional physics);

4 KINETIC THEORY OF GASSES (The colliding billiard ball model ) Gas atoms have a range of velocities, increasing with temperature. Gas molecules therefore have appreciable energy and momentum. Pressure is the cumulative result of the momentum changes in collisions. Collision likelihood is usually expressed as “mean free path” (average distance molecules move between collisions).

5 LEVELS OF VACUUM Air at 273 K, molecular V rms ~ 485 m/s Pressure (V HV UHV UHV ) Atm, 1.0 1/760 - - - - kPa, 101.3 0.13, 0.13Pa - - - psi, 14.7 0.02 - - - - Torr, 760 1 1e-3 1e-6 1e-9 1e-12 Mean Free Path, at 273 K, mol radius 0.3 nm; m ~1e-7,~7e-5,~7e-2, ~7e+1,~7e+4, ~7e+7

6 VACUUM PUMPS Mechanical; with valves, vanes, diaphrams (Roughing pumps, forepumps). Entrainment principle  Diffusion pumps,  Turbomolecular pumps. Entrapment principle  Cryopumps,  ionpumps (gettering)  TI sputtering  molecular sieves (zeolites and other synthetic microporous compounds)

7 PROBLEMS WITH PUMPING Need for a forepump. Contamination of vacuum by backflow. Gas selectivity. Need for regeneration. Virtual leaks. Speed, ease of cycling to lab conditions.

8 VAPOUR PRESSURE

9 MULTI-PUMP SYSTEM

10 ROTARY VANE FORE PUMP

11 DIFFUSION PUMPS

12 TURBO-MOLECULAR PUMPS

13 TURBO- MOLECULAR PUMP

14 ION PUMP

15 ION VACUUM GAUGE

16 THE VACUUM ENCLOSURE Materials: - (Glass & stainless steel predominate.) Requirements:-  Chemically inert  Cleanable  Bakeable  Strong  Workable, (e.g., machineable)

17 TYPICAL VACUUM SYSTEM Forepump Main vacuum pump with cooling. Gate valve,(to allow pump turn off). Vacuum gauges, if not intrinsic to pumps. Cold trap(s) (Liquid air). Sample inlets, if required. View & manipulation ports, experiment area. Bakeout system.

18 VACUUM SYSTEM COMPONENTS Older systems mainly were hand fabricated from glass by artisanal glassblowing. New systems mainly are constructed from commercially manufactured stainless steel components using (e.g.,):-  Bolted flange connections  Thin metal seals  Glass- to-metal sealed electrical connections  Bellows connected or in-vac bakeable manipulators  Special window glasses for radiation entry/exit

19 VACUUM COMPONENTS

20 USES OF VACUUM TECHNOLOGY Semiconductor lithography and surface coating. Analytical inst’s; e.g., spectrometers, microscopes. Particle accelerators, HEP Space simulation Nanotechnoloy Surface physics. Gas lasers. Manufacturing of special materials. Some examples:-


Download ppt "PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB VACUUM TECHNOLOGY G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 12."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google