Roger Webb

Professor Roger Webb


Director of Ion Beam Centre, Professor of Ion Beam Physics
+441483689830
22 NC 00
PA: Karen Arthur

麻豆视频

University roles and responsibilities

  • Director of the Surrey Ion Beam
  • Centre Chair of the Facilities Directorate

    Affiliations and memberships

    Institute of Physics
    Member
    Computer Simulation of Radiation Effects in Solids (COSIRES)
    International Advisory Board
    Ion Beam Analysis (IBA)
    International Advisory Board
    Ion Solid Interactions (ISI)
    International Advisory Board
    Radiation Effects in Matter (REM)
    International Advisory Board

    Research

    Research interests

    Teaching

    Publications

    JANELLA MARIE DE JESUS, CATIA DANIELA SANTOS COSTA, Amy Burton, VLADIMIR PALITSIN, ROGER PAUL WEBB, Adam Taylor, Chelsea Nikula, Alex Dexter, Firat Kaya, MARK CHAMBERS, Veronique Dartois, Richard J.A. Goodwin, Josephine Bunch, MELANIE JANE BAILEY (2021), In: Analytical Chemistry93(40)pp. 13417-13742 American Chemical Society

    Elemental and molecular imaging play a crucial role in understanding disease pathogenesis. To accurately correlate elemental and molecular markers, it is desirable to perform sequential elemental and molecular imaging on a single tissue section. However, very little is known about the impact of performing these measurements in sequence. In this work, we highlight some of the challenges and successes associated with performing elemental mapping in sequence with mass spectrometry imaging. Specifically, the feasibility of molecular mapping using the mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) techniques matrix assisted laser desorption ionisation (MALDI) and desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI) in sequence with the elemental mapping technique particle induced X-ray emission (PIXE) is explored. Challenges for integration include substrate compatibility, as well as delocalisation and spectral changes. We demonstrate that whilst sequential imaging comes with some compromises, sequential DESI-PIXE imaging is sufficient to correlate sulphur, iron and lipid markers in a single tissue section at the 50-micrometre scale.

    Catia Costa, Janella De Jesus, Chelsea Nikula, Teresa Murta, Geoffrey W. W. Grime, Vladimir Palitsin, Veronique Dartois, Kaya Firat, Roger Webb, Josephine Bunch, Melanie J. J. Bailey (2023), In: Metabolites13(2) Mdpi

    The colocation of elemental species with host biomolecules such as lipids and metabolites may shed new light on the dysregulation of metabolic pathways and how these affect disease pathogeneses. Alkali metals have been the subject of extensive research, are implicated in various neurodegenerative and infectious diseases and are known to disrupt lipid metabolism. Desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI) is a widely used approach for molecular imaging, but previous work has shown that DESI delocalises ions such as potassium (K) and chlorine (Cl), precluding the subsequent elemental analysis of the same section of tissue. The solvent typically used for the DESI electrospray is a combination of methanol and water. Here we show that a novel solvent system, (50:50 (%v/v) MeOH:EtOH) does not delocalise elemental species and thus enables elemental mapping to be performed on the same tissue section post-DESI. Benchmarking the MeOH:EtOH electrospray solvent against the widely used MeOH:H2O electrospray solvent revealed that the MeOH:EtOH solvent yielded increased signal-to-noise ratios for selected lipids. The developed multimodal imaging workflow was applied to a lung tissue section containing a tuberculosis granuloma, showcasing its applicability to elementally rich samples displaying defined structural information.

    Holly-May Lewis, Catia Costa, Ve虂ronique Dartois, Firat Kaya, Mark Chambers, Janella de Jesus, Vladimir Palitsin, Roger Webb, Melanie J. Bailey (2022), In: Analytical chemistry (Washington)94(34)pp. 11798-11806 American Chemical Society

    Elemental imaging is widely used for imaging cells and tissues but rarely in combination with organic mass spectrometry, which can be used to profile lipids and measure drug concentrations. Here, we demonstrate how elemental imaging and a new method for spatially resolved lipidomics (DAPNe-LC-MS, based on capillary microsampling and liquid chromatography mass spectrometry) can be used in combination to probe the relationship between metals, drugs, and lipids in discrete areas of tissues. This new method for spatial lipidomics, reported here for the first time, has been applied to rabbit lung tissues containing a lesion (caseous granuloma) caused by tuberculosis infection. We demonstrate how elemental imaging with spatially resolved lipidomics can be used to probe the association between ion accumulation and lipid profiles and verify local drug distribution.

    Roger Webb, Melanie Bailey (2009), In: Radiation effects and defects in solids164(7-8)pp. 387-388 Taylor & Francis
    Brian Sealy, Roger Webb, Mark Breese (2002), In: Nuclear instruments & methods in physics research. Section B, Beam interactions with materials and atoms188(1)pp. vii-vii Elsevier B.V
    G. Carter, M. J. Nobes, K. I. Arshak, R. P. Webb, D. Evanson, B. D. L. Eghawary, J. H. Williamson (1979), In: Journal of materials science14(3)728pp. 728-736
    Mateus G. Masteghin, Benedict N. Murdin, Dominic A. Duffy, Steven K. Clowes, David C. Cox, Stephen J. Sweeney, Roger P. Webb (2024), In: Journal of physics. Condensed matter36(43)431501 IOP Publishing Ltd

    In this perspective article, we discuss the application of ion implantation to manipulate strain (by either neutralizing or inducing compressive or tensile states) in suspended thin films. Emphasizing the pressing need for a high-mobility silicon-compatible transistor or a direct bandgap group-IV semiconductor that is compatible with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, we underscore the distinctive features of different methods of ion beam-induced alteration of material morphology. The article examines the precautions needed during experimental procedures and data analysis and explores routes for potential scalable adoption by the semiconductor industry. Finally, we briefly discuss how this highly controllable strain-inducing technique can facilitate enhanced manipulation of impurity-based spin quantum bits (qubits).

    Mohammed Ismael, Roger Webb, Mazhar Ajaz, Karen J. Kirkby, Helen M. Coley (2019), In: Cancers11(10)1429 Mdpi

    An increased rate of cellular proliferation is a hallmark of cancer and may be accompanied by an increase in ribosome biogenesis and dysregulation in rRNA synthesis. In this regard, CX-5461 has been developed as a novel RNA polymerase I inhibitor and is currently in Phase I/II clinical trials for solid and hematological malignancies. In the present study, interactions between CX-5461 and single-dose X-ray exposure were assessed using isobologram analysis using MTS assay and drug-induced cell death was assessed using flow cytometric, confocal microscopy and Western blot analysis. Combination treatments involving CX-5461 and single-dose X-ray exposure highlighted increased effectiveness compared to individual treatment alone in the CaSki cervical cancer line, with marked synergistic interaction occurring within the low-drug (50 nM) and low-dose radiation range (2-6 Gy). Cell lines challenged with CX-5461 demonstrated the presence of DNA damage, induction of apoptosis, autophagy and senescence alongside high percentages of G2/M cell cycle arrest. In addition, we report preferential sensitivity of ovarian cancer cells with BRCA2 mutation to this novel agent. Taken together, CX-5461 displayed a broad spectrum of activity in a panel of solid cancer cell lines with IC50 values ranging from 35 nM to >1 mu M. The work described herein identifies the synergistic effects of CX-5461 in combination with X-rays in solid cancers and may also aid in the design of clinical trials involving this novel agent.

    Nathan Cassidy, Paul Blenkinsopp, Ian Brown, Richard J. Curry, B. N. Murdin, Roger Webb, David Cox (2021), In: Physica status solidi. A, Applications and materials science218(1)

    Ion Implantation In article number 2000237 by Nathan Cassidy, Roger Webb, David Cox, and co鈥恮orkers, preliminary results are presented from the first commercially produced implanter specifically designed for rapid and precise positioning of single ions into device structures for solid state quantum technology applications. Specifically the implantation of single bismuth ions into Si, Ge, Cu, and Au are reported, and the counting detection efficiency for single ion implants and the factors that affect such detection efficiencies are determined.

    Yan-Ru Lin, Steven J. Zinkle, Christophe J. Ortiz, Jean-Paul Crocombette, Roger Paul Webb, Roger E. Stoller (2023), In: Supplementary data 1

    Ion irradiation and implantation have wide applications that demand accurate determination of displacement damage profile and distribution of implanted ion concentration. The prediction of vacancies is especially important to determine displacements per atom (dpa), the standard parameter of primary radiation damage in materials. However, significant discrepancies exist in estimations of vacancies between full-cascade (F-C) and quick calculation (Q-C) options in the popular computer code SRIM. This study inspected the SRIM code and a relatively new code called Iradina, which uses a similar methodology, to develop an understanding of the origin of vacancy overestimation in the F-C options for SRIM and Iradina. We found that the default values of thresholds (namely final energy in SRIM and replacement energy in Iradina) in displacement production calculations results in excessively large number of calculated vacancies and very few replacements. After conducting multiple calculations using SRIM, Iradina, and MARLOWE (all based on the binary collision approximation), a comparison of the results indicates that there is a shortcoming in the SRIM and Iradina F-C methodology for treating near-threshold collisions. This issue is responsible for the deficiency of replacements and excess of calculated vacancies in the SRIM and Iradina F-C results. Drawing on the principles of collision physics, we propose recommendations for modifying the source codes to address these issues.

    M Niania, Matthew K Sharpe, R. Webb, J. Kilner (2020), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms480pp. 27-32 Elsevier

    LEIS depth profiles, obtained by low energy (0.5聽keV) Ar+ sputtering, have been analysed for the mixed conducting oxide material La0.6Sr0.4Co0.2Fe0.8O3-未. Samples have been examined after differing thermal treatments to examine the sub-surface reorganisation of the cation species. The profiles have shown considerable changes, but these are not strongly correlated with the thermal treatments. The similarity between the profiles suggests that preferential sputtering effects can dominate the sub-surface region (~1鈥3聽nm) where sputtering has not reached equilibrium. Preferential sputtering of oxygen in oxide materials is well known, but here we provide evidence of the preferential sputtering of the cationic species in a complex multicomponent oxide. Of note is strong enrichment (~30%) of the sputtered surface with the heaviest of the elements, La. Simulations using the code TRIDYN have confirmed the observations, in particular, La surface enrichment and the fluence needed to achieve steady state sputtering of聽>听3听脳听1016肠尘鈭2.

    NJ Bright, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby, TR Willson, DJ Driscoll, SM Reddy, NI Ward, MJ Bailey, S Bleay (2013), In: Forensic Science International230(1-3)pp. 81-86

    The effect of vacuum exposure on latent fingerprint chemistry has been evaluated. Fingerprints were analysed using a quartz crystal microbalance to measure changes in mass, gas chromatography mass spectrometry to measure changes in lipid composition and attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) to determine changes in the content of water, fatty acids and their esters after exposure to vacuum. The results are compared with samples aged under ambient conditions. It was found that fingerprints lose around 26% of their mass when exposed to vacuum conditions, equivalent to around 5 weeks ageing under ambient conditions. Further exposure to vacuum causes a significant reduction in the lipid composition of a fingerprint, in particular with the loss of tetradecanoic and pentadecanoic acid, that was not observed in ambient aged samples. There are therefore implications for sequence in which fingerprint development procedures (for example vacuum metal deposition) are carried out, as well as the use of vacuum based methods such as secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation (MALDI) in the study of fingerprint chemistry. 漏 2013 .

    L. Matja膷i膰, V. Palitsin, G.W. Grime, N. Abdul-Karim, R.P. Webb (2019), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms450pp. 353-356 Elsevier

    Ion Beam Analysis (IBA) consists of a set of analytical techniques addressing elemental composition of inorganic material normally conducted using ion beams in the MeV kinetic energy range. Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry using MeV ions (MeV SIMS) is the only IBA technique which can provide extensive molecular information about organic materials. MeV ions can be extracted into air hence offering the potential to apply MeV SIMS under atmospheric pressure. At the 麻豆视频 Ion Beam Centre, a fully ambient MeV SIMS setup has been developed and termed 鈥淎mbient Pressure MeV SIMS鈥. This AP MeV SIMS can be optimized for analysis and imaging of organic molecules. MeV SIMS relies upon electronic sputtering of the target material and this is much more efficient in insulating or organic targets, and less efficient in conducting metallic materials. PIXE, on the other hand, is efficient at providing good signals from elemental metallic systems, but does not readily provide molecular information from organics. The combination of the two techniques 鈥 preferably simultaneously with the same beam 鈥 provides useful complementary information which can readily be combined. Here we present pioneering preliminary work in simultaneous molecular and elemental imaging of a complex sample comprising of two organic species and two metallic species by combining AP MeV SIMS with Heavy Ion Particle Induced X-ray emission (HIPIXE).

    JE MYNARD, C JEYNES, J THORNTON, A WAY, R WEBB, D ALBURY, PLF HEMMENT, KG STEPHENS (1985), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS6(1-2)pp. 264-269 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    A HAMMICHE, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1994), In: VACUUM45(5)pp. 575-577 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    T Alzanki, R Gwilliam, N Emerson, A Smith, R Webb, BJ Sealy (2006), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS242(1-2)pp. 693-695
    S Al-Shehri, Vladimir Palitsin, Roger Webb, Geoffrey Grime (2015), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms348pp. 223-228

    The proton beam writing (PBW) technique was used to fabricate microfluidic structures in SU-8 resist. A network of the buried channels was fabricated as part of a project to develop functional microfluidic device for neuronal studies and self-powered microfluidics. Protons with energies between 2.5 MeV and 0.75 MeV were used to fabricate the buried channels with a minimum feature size of around 1 渭m and depths of 40鈥55 渭m. Roughness of channels sidewalls was around 2.5 nm rms. Exposure regime and examples of functional networks fabricated using PBW are described. COMSOL Multiphysics庐 software was used to model the flow characteristics of fluid in the SU-8 microchannels structured by PBW. The results obtained using PBW are compared with the structures fabricated by UV-lithography.

    R WEBB, G CARTER (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS42(3-4)pp. 159-168 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    DJ Kang, NH Peng, R Webb, C Jeynes, G Burnell, JH Yun, SH Moon, B Oh, EJ Tarte, DF Moore, M Kelly, MG Blamire (2002), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS188pp. 183-188
    IR CHAKAROV, RP WEBB (1993), In: VACUUM44(3-4)pp. 325-329 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1982), In: Journal of Applied Physics53(7)pp. 5243-5249

    Normal incidence argon-copper sputtering mechanisms have been investigated for ion energies just above threshold. Identical mechanisms operate in both the (111) and (001) surface orientations. Adsorption of an ordered oxygen overlay on the surface does not destroy the ejection processes. Although the mechanisms produce similar ejected atom energy distributions, the processes may be experimentally distinguishable through the angular emission spectrum of the ejected copper atoms.

    G CARTER, DG ARMOUR, SE DONNELLY, DC INGRAM, RP WEBB (1980), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS53(3-4)pp. 143-173 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    R SMITH, K BEARDMORE, A GRASMARTI, R KIRCHNER, RP WEBB (1995), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS102(1-4)pp. 211-217 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    RP WEBB, A GRASMARTI, IA WILSON, DE HARRISON, E LOUIS, F GUINEA (1987), In: PHYSICS LETTERS A126(2)pp. 136-140 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    Ella Schneider, JONATHAN GERALD ENGLAND, LUKE ANTWIS, ALEX FRASER ROYLE, ROGER PAUL WEBB, Russell Gwilliam (2021), In: Journal of Physics D: Applied physics54(35)355105 IOP Publishing

    We have investigated the use of conventional ion implantation to fabricate enriched 28 Si layers for use in quantum computers. The final compositions of samples enriched using ultra-low energy (800 eV and 2 keV) and low energy (20 keV) 28 Si implants of varying fluences (1x10 16-3.8x10 17 cm-2) using two different implanters were measured using channelled Rutherford Backscattering Spectroscopy. The dynamic, binary collision approximation program TRIDYN was used to model the implantation profiles to guide the analysis of the RBS spectra. It was found that ultra-low energy implants achieved high 28 Si enrichment levels but were heavily contaminated with oxygen due to poor vacuum in the implanter wafer end station. It was shown that oxidation could be reduced by using an accelerator with an end station with better vacuum and increasing the implant energy to 20 keV. However, TRIDYN simulations predict that the best 28 Si enrichment levels that could be achieved under these conditions would saturate at ~99.2 % due to self-sputtering. We modelled a range of conditions with TRIDYN and so recommend low energies (99.9 %) with the lowest possible fluences (~5-10x10 17 cm-2).

    J THORNTON, KC PAUS, RP WEBB, IH WILSON, GR BOOKER (1988), In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS21(2)pp. 334-338 IOP PUBLISHING LTD
    R Webb, A Chatzipanagiotou (2006), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS242(1-2)pp. 413-416
    Holly-May Lewis, Roger Webb, Guido F Verbeck, Josephine Bunch, Janella De Jesus, Catia Costa, Vladimir Palitsin, John G. Swales, Richard J. A. Goodwin, Patrick Sears, Melanie Jane Bailey (2019), In: Analytical Chemistry91(24)pp. 15411-15417 American Chemical Society

    Direct analyte probed nanoextraction (DAPNe) is a technique that allows extraction of drug and endogenous compounds from a discrete location on a tissue sample using a nano capillary filled with solvent. Samples can be extracted from a spot diameters as low as 6 碌m. Studies previously undertaken by our group have shown that the technique can provide good precision (5%) for analysing drug molecules in 150 碌m diameter areas of homogenised tissue, provided an internal standard is sprayed on to the tissue prior to analysis. However, without an isotopically labelled standard, the repeatability is poor, even after normalisation to and the spot area or matrix compounds. By application to tissue homogenates spiked with drug compounds, we can demonstrate that it is possible to significantly improve the repeatability of the technique by incorporating a liquid chromatography separation step. Liquid chromatography is a technique for separating compounds prior to mass spectrometry (LC-MS) which enables separation of isomeric compounds that cannot be discriminated using mass spectrometry alone, as well as reducing matrix interferences. Conventionally, LC-MS is carried out on bulk or homogenised samples, which means analysis is essentially an average of the sample and does not take into account discrete areas. This work opens a new opportunity for spatially resolved liquid chromatography mass spectrometry with precision better than 20%.

    BI MEDEUOV, DK DAUKEEV, IR CHAKAROV, RP WEBB (1994), In: VACUUM45(5)pp. 583-586 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    A HAMMICHE, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1994), In: VACUUM45(5)pp. 569-573
    JA Sharp, NEB Cowern, RP Webb, D Giubertoni, S Gennaro, M Bersani, MA Foad, KJ Kirkby (2006), In: BJ Pawlak, KS Jones, SB Felch, M Hane (eds.), Doping Engineering for Device Fabrication912pp. 159-163
    G CARTER, R WEBB (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS43(1)pp. 19-24 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    Y Wakamatsu, H Yamada, S Ninomiya, BN Jones, T Seki, T Aoki, R Webb, J Matsuo (2011), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms269(20)pp. 2251-2253
    MJ Merchant, GW Grime, KJ Kirkby, R Webb (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS260(1)pp. 8-14
    NH Peng, C Jeynes, R Webb, I Chakarov, M Blamire (2002), In: PHYSICA C-SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND ITS APPLICATIONS372pp. 55-58
    Holly-May Lewis, Priyanka Gupta, Kyle DG Saunders, Shazneil Briones, Johanna Von Gerichten, Paul A Townsend, Eirini Velliou, Dany Beste, Olivier Cexus, Roger Paul Webb, Melanie Jane Bailey (2023), In: Analyst148(5)pp. 1041-1049 Royal Society of Chemistry

    This work describes the development of a new approach to measure drug levels and lipid fingerprints in single living mammalian cells. Nanocapillary sampling is an approach that enables the selection and isolation of single living cells under microscope observation. Here, live single cell nanocapillary sampling is coupled to liquid chromatography for the first time. This allows molecular species to be separated prior to ionisation and improves measurement precision of drug analytes. The efficiency of transferring analytes from the sampling capillary into a vial was optimised in this work. The analysis was carried out using standard flow liquid chromatography coupled to widely available mass spectrometry instrumentation, highlighting opportunities for widespread adoption. The method was applied to 30 living cells, revealing cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the uptake of different antibiotics. Using this system, we detected 14-158 lipid features per single cell, revealing the association between bedaquiline uptake and lipid fingerprints.

    KJ Kirkby, GW Grime, RP Webb, NF Kirkby, M Folkard, K Prise, B Vojnovic (2006), In: RADIATION RESEARCH166(4)pp. 654-655
    M Richard, KJ Kirkby, RP Webb, NF Kirkby (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS255(1)pp. 18-22
    BV KING, C JEYNES, RP WEBB, JA KILNER (1993), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS80-1pp. 163-166
    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1983), In: Physical Review Letters50(19)pp. 1478-1481

    Computer simulations of ion-bombardment events which recrystallize the target demonstrate pit formation at 1.0 keV. Atoms are ejected from the first two target layers in the pit region. The remainder of the pit is created by replacement-collision sequences. Linear-cascade and spike-regime events are dynamically indistinguishable. 漏 1983 The American Physical Society.

    NH Peng, C Jeynes, RP Webb, IR Chakarov, MG Blamire (2001), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS178pp. 242-246
    PK Marriott, M Jenkin, C Jeynes, NP Barradas, RP Webb, BJ Sealy (1999), In: JL Duggan, IL Morgan (eds.), APPLICATION OF ACCELERATORS IN RESEARCH AND INDUSTRY, PTS 1 AND 2475pp. 592-595
    BI MEDEUOV, DK DAUKEEV, RP WEBB (1994), In: VACUUM45(5)pp. 579-582 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP Webb, MI Current, I Yamada, M Mack, M Gwinn, D Jacobson (2006), In: JF Ziegler (eds.), Ion Implantation Science and Technology(10)pp. 10-1 Ion Implantation Technology Co.

    This chapter describes the methods and applications for the use of multi-atom, ionized species, containing 10s to several thousand atoms, for high-flux ion doping and modification of surfaces with sub-keV energies per atom. 鈥淢assive鈥 ion beams are formed using molecular species, liquids and gas clusters. Ion beam systems for such 鈥渕assive鈥 ions include the use of novel vaporizer methods, adiabatic cooling, electron beam ionization, and other techniques to provide stable, high-fluence beams. Applications include high-dose ion implantation for ultra-shallow junctions, room-temperature deposition of semiconductor and other layers, smoothing and high-rate etching of surfaces.

    IN EVDOKIMOV, R WEBB, DG ARMOUR, DS KARPUZOV (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS42(1-2)pp. 83-92 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    DE Harrison, RP Webb (1982), In: Journal of Applied Physics53(6)pp. 4193-4201

    A molecular dynamics simulation has been used to investigate the sensitivity of atom ejection processes from a single-crystal target to changes in the atom-atom potential function. Four functions, three constructed from the Gibson potentials with Anderman's attractive well, and a fourth specifically developed for this investigation, were investigated in the Cu/Ar+ system over a range of ion energies from 1.0 to 10.0 kev with the KSE-B ion-atom potential. Well depths and widths also were varied. The calculations were done at normal incidence on the fcc (111) crystal orientation. Computed values were compared with experimental data where they exist. Sputtering yields, multimer yield ratios, layer yield ratios, and the ejected atom energy distribution vary systematically with the parameters of the atom-atom potential function. Calculations also were done with the modified Moliere function. Yields and other properties fall exactly into the positions predicted from the Born-Mayer function analysis. Simultaneous analysis of the ejected atom energy distribution and the ion energy dependence of the sputtering yield curve provides information about the parameters of both the wall and well portions of the atom-atom potential function.

    C Jeynes, KE Puttick, LC Whitmore, K Gartner, AE Gee, DK Millen, RP Webb, RMA Peel, BJ Sealy (1996), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS118(1-4)pp. 431-436 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    N Peng, C Jeynes, RM Gwilliam, KJ Kirkby, RP Webb (2007), In: PHYSICA C-SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND ITS APPLICATIONS460pp. 600-601

    Both Rutherford backscatterings of He-4(+) beams and non-Rutherford backscatterings of He-4(+) and H+ beams have been used in this study to investigate the depth profiles of B dopant in Mg target upon B implantation and post annealing. Primitive data analysis suggests an enhanced diffusion of surface C contaminant during the B implantation process, together with enhanced surface oxidation upon implantation and thermal annealing in flowing N-2 atmosphere. Published by Elsevier B.V.

    RP WEBB, DE HARRISON, KM BARFOOT (1985), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS7-8(MAR)pp. 143-146 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    C Jeynes, RP Webb, A Lohstroh (2011), In: Reviews of Accelerator Science and Technology4pp. 41-82 World Scientific

    Analysis using MeV ion beams is a thin film characterisation technique invented some 50 years ago which has recently had the benefit of a number of important advances. This review will cover damage profiling in crystals including studies of defects in semiconductors, surface studies, and depth profiling with sputtering. But it will concentrate on thin film depth profiling using Rutherford backscattering, particle induced X-ray emission and related techniques in the deliberately synergistic way that has only recently become possible. In this review of these new developments, we will show how this integrated approach, which we might call 鈥渢otal IBA鈥, has given the technique great analytical power.

    MJ Bailey, BN Jones, RP Webb, S Hinder, J Watts, S Bleay (2010), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms268(11-12)pp. 1929-1932
    M Kerford, RP Webb (1999), In: CARBON37(5)pp. 859-864
    Mudassar Nazir, Zhongtang Xu, N H Peng, Naheed Akhtar, P Papakonstantinou, R P Webb, Yanwei Ma, Dongning Zheng (2021), In: Superconductor Science and Technology33(7)075012 IOP Publishing

    The effect of 600 keV He+ ion irradiation on the temperature and magnetic field dependence of the critical current density JC in high quality BaFe1.84Co0.16As2 (Co-doped Ba122 type) thin films is investigated. The films are prepared by pulsed-laser-deposition (PLD) on CaF2 (00 $l$) substrates. The irradiation dosages are varied between 1 脳 1013 and 1 脳 1016 cm鈭2. Upon irradiation, the superconducting transition temperature TC drops slightly from 25 K for the unirradiated sample to about 20 K for the sample with the highest irradiation level. The JC values of the thin film samples are calculated by using the Bean critical state model. The results showed that JC could be enhanced substantially. The maximum JC value at 4.5 K temperature is enhanced up to 2.4 MA cm鈭2 under 1 T field. The analysis of pinning force dependence on magnetic field shows that the pinning behavior is not changed in the irradiated samples, suggesting more pinning centers of similar nature to those of presented in the unirradiated samples are introduced by the irradiation process. The results indicate that the irradiation of light element ions He+ with relatively low energy could increase the critical current density in iron based superconductors.

    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1984), In: Vacuum34(10-11)pp. 847-851

    Molecular dynamics computer simulations have been used to study the development of ion-induced cascades in the surface region of an initially perfect single crystal metal target. A 16 mm movie has been produced to show the temporal progress of individual cascades. The cascades can then be seen to be formed from a few high energy primary knock-on initiated replacement collision sequences which overlap to form the more usual interpretation of a mature collision cascade. However, it is before the collision cascade has matured, and while the replacement sequences are spreading, that the majority of atoms (>80%) are ejected. These qualitative observations are also upheld more quantitatively in a global average, over many cascades, of the ejection time of each atom. This gives rise to the appearance of a statistical ejection front which propagates radially outwards, from the impact point on the crystal surface, with a well defined velocity. 漏 1984.

    NH Peng, DJ Kang, C Jeynes, RP Webb, DF Moore, MG Blamire, IR Chakarov (2003), In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY13(2)pp. 889-892
    A HAMMICHE, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1994), In: JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B12(3)pp. 1413-1415 AMER INST PHYSICS
    G CARTER, MJ NOBES, KI ARSHAK, RP WEBB, D EVANSON, BDL EGHAWARY, JH WILLIAMSON (1979), In: JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE14(3)pp. 728-736 CHAPMAN HALL LTD
    RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1989), In: VACUUM39(11-12)pp. 1163-1165 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    C Jeynes, MJ Bailey, NJ Bright, ME Christopher, GW Grime, BN Jones, VV Palitsin, RP Webb (2012), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms271pp. 107-118 Elsevier

    The suite of techniques which are available with the small accelerators used for MeV ion beam analysis (IBA) range from broad beams, microbeams or external beams using the various particle and photon spectrometries (including RBS, EBS, ERD, STIM, PIXE, PIGE, NRA and their variants), to tomography and secondary particle spectrometries like MeV-SIMS. These can potentially yield almost everything there is to know about the 3-D elemental composition of types of samples that have always been hard to analyse, given the sensitivity and the spacial resolution of the techniques used. Molecular and chemical information is available in principle with, respectively, MeV-SIMS and high resolution PIXE. However, these techniques separately give only partial information 鈥 the secret of 鈥淭otal IBA鈥 is to find synergies between techniques used simultaneously which efficiently give extra information. We here review how far 鈥淭otal IBA鈥 can be considered already a reality, and what further needs to be done to realise its full potential.

    DG ARMOUR, G CARTER, RP WEBB, DC INGRAM, R NEWCOMBE (1980), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS50(2)pp. 45-50 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    A HAMMICHE, W YU, IH WILSON, RP WEBB (1991), In: REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS62(12)pp. 3010-3021 AMER INST PHYSICS
    N Peng, C Jeynes, MJ Bailey, D Adikaari, V Stolojan, RP Webb (2009), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS267(8-9)pp. 1623-1625 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    A. T. Kearsley, R. P. Webb, G. W. Grime, P. J. Wozniakiewicz, M. C. Price, M. J. Burchell, T. Salge, J. Spratt (2024), In: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences The Royal Society

    Exposure of the Hubble Space Telescope to space in low Earth orbit resulted in numerous hypervelocity impacts by cosmic dust (micrometeoroids) and anthropogenic particles (orbital debris) on the solar arrays and the radiator shield of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, both subsequently returned to Earth. Solar cells preserve residues from smaller cosmic dust (and orbital debris) but give less reliable information from larger particles. Here, we present images and analyses from electron, ion and X-ray fluorescence microscopes for larger impact features (millimetre- to centimetre-scale) on the radiator shield. Validated by laboratory experiments, these allow interpretation of composition, probable origin and likely dimensions of the larger impactors. The majority (~90%) of impacts by grains greater than 50 渭m in size were made by micrometeoroids, dominated by magnesium- and iron-rich silicates and iron sulfides, metallic iron-nickel and chromium-rich spinel similar to that in ordinary chondrite meteorites of asteroid origin. Our re-evaluation of the largest impact features shows substantially fewer large orbital debris impacts than reported by earlier authors. Mismatch to the NASA ORDEM and ESA MASTER models of particle populations in orbit may be partly due to model overestimation of orbital debris flux and underestimation of larger micrometeoroid numbers.

    RP Webb (2014), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS169(5)pp. 369-370 TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
    JA Sharp, AJ Smith, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby, NEB Cowern, D Giubertoni, S Gennaro, M Bersani, MA Foad, PF Fazzini, F Cristiano (2008), In: APPL PHYS LETT92(8)082109 AMER INST PHYSICS

    The effects of surface proximity and B concentration on end-of-range defect formation during nonmelt laser annealing in preamorphized silicon have been studied. These effects were analyzed by observing the activation and diffusion of an ultrashallow B implant, using Hall effect and secondary ion mass spectrometry measurements. By adjusting the preamorphizing implant and laser annealing conditions, B deactivation and diffusion were minimized, resulting in a sheet resistance of similar to 600 Omega/sq with a 16 nm junction depth. This is attributed to a combination of enhanced dissolution of end-of-range defects and preferential formation of B-interstitial clusters due to the surface proximity and high B concentration, respectively. (C) 2008 American Institute of Physics.

    A HAMMICHE, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1993), In: REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS64(11)pp. 3332-3333 AMER INST PHYSICS
    G CARTER, G FISCHER, R WEBB, S DZIOBA, R KELLY, O AUCIELLO (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS45(1-2)pp. 45-48 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    NP Barradas, C Jeynes, RP Webb (1997), In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS71(2)pp. 291-293 AMER INST PHYSICS
    RP Webb, KJ Kirkby (2005), In: MOLECULAR SIMULATION31(2-3)pp. 95-100 TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
    J Warmenhoven, J Demarche, V Palitsin, K Kirkby, P Webb (2015), In: Physics Procedia66pp. 352-360 Elsevier

    The Surrey Ion Beam Centre was awarded the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) grant for 鈥淧romoting Cross Disciplinary Research: Engineering and Physical Sciences and Social Sciences鈥 allowing continued research into the characteristics of desorption of secondary ions by the impact of fast primary ions in the ambient pressure at the sub-micron scale. To carry out this research a new beamline has been constructed consisting of a time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometer combined with the current 2MV Tandem accelerator. This research has already returned many significant results such as the first simultaneous SIMS, PIXE and RBS measurement preformed on an organic sample in vacuum. However, further optimization and validation of the new beamline is still being worked on. This work focuses on the optimization of the end station geometry to allow for high sensitivity ambient pressure measurements. It is concluded that a common geometry can be adopted for a wide variety of smooth samples to ensure optimum sensitivity provided a hard edge of the sample can be found to place the mass spectrometer capillary near.

    AS Way, C Jeynes, RP Webb (1999), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS148(1-4)pp. 238-241
    A Simon, C Jeynes, RP Webb, R Finnis, Z Tabatabian, PJ Sellin, MBH Breese, DF Fellows, R van den Broek, RM Gwilliam (2004), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS219pp. 405-409 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    NH Peng, I Chakarov, C Jeynes, R Webb, W Booij, M Blamire, M Kelly (2000), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS164pp. 979-985
    IN EVDOKIMOV, RP WEBB, DG ARMOUR (1981), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS58(1-2)pp. 59-64 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    S Donnelly, D Ingram, R Webb, D Armour (1979), In: Vacuum29(8-9)pp. 303-307

    The inherent difficulties in interpreting thermal desorption spectra are discussed. Possible mechanisms which can change the expected form of the evolution spectra are investigated including the possibility of a distribution of activation energies for release of trapped gas and the spatial distribution of the trapped gas. It is shown that the form of the evolution spectra can be quite misleading and unless care is taken the wrong conclusions can be derived. 漏 1979.

    IR CHAKAROV, RP WEBB (1994), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS130pp. 447-452 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    SE DONNELLY, F BODART, KM BARFOOT, R WERZ, RP WEBB (1982), In: THIN SOLID FILMS94(4)pp. 289-305 ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA LAUSANNE
    RS KALSI, RP WEBB (1988), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS33(1-4)pp. 530-533 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    MATEUS GALLUCCI MASTEGHIN, Vivian Tong, ELEANOR BEATRICE SCHNEIDER, CAMERON CHRISTOPHER UNDERWOOD, Tomas Peach, BENEDICT NEIL MURDIN, ROGER PAUL WEBB, STEVEN K CLOWES, DAVID CHRISTOPHER COX (2021), In: Physical review materials5124603 APS

    The introduction of strain into semiconductors offers a well-known route to modify their band structure. Here, we show a single-step procedure for generating such strains smoothly and deterministically, over a very wide range, using a simple, easily available, highly scalable, ion implantation technique to control the degree of amorphization in and around single-crystal membranes. The amorphization controls the density of the material and thus the tension in the neighboring crystalline regions. We have demonstrated up to 3.1% biaxial tensile strain and 8.5% uniaxial strain in silicon, based on micro-Raman spectroscopy. This method achieves strain levels never previously reached in mesoscopic defect-free, crystalline silicon structures. The flexible, gently controllable, single-step process points toward very high mobility complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor devices and easy fabrication of direct-bandgap germanium for silicon-compatible optoelectronics.

    G Boudreault, C Jeynes, E Wendler, A Nejim, RP Webb, U Watjen (2002), In: SURFACE AND INTERFACE ANALYSIS33(6)pp. 478-486 WILEY-BLACKWELL
    SH Winston, RM Gwilliam, BJ Sealy, G Boudreault, C Jeynes, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby (2003), In: B Brown, TL Alford, M Nastasi, MC Vella (eds.), IIT2002: ION IMPLANTATION TECHNOLOGY, PROCEEDINGSpp. 115-118
    R SMITH, RP WEBB (1992), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS67(1-4)pp. 373-383 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    BJ Garrison, Z Postawa, KE Ryan, JC Vickerman, RP Webb, N Winograd (2009), In: ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY81(6)pp. 2260-2267 AMER CHEMICAL SOC
    BV KING, RP WEBB (1992), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS64(1-4)pp. 724-729 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    KM BARFOOT, RP WEBB, SE DONNELLY (1984), In: VACUUM34(10-1)pp. 825-829 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    R Smith, M Shaw, RP Webb, MA Foad (1998), In: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS83(6)pp. 3148-3152 AMER INST PHYSICS
    N Peng, G Shao, C Jeynes, RP Webb, RM Gwilliam, G Boudreault, DM Astill, WY Liang (2003), In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS82(2)pp. 236-238 AMER INST PHYSICS
    G CARTER, R WEBB, R COLLINS (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS43(4-5)pp. 125-132 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    C Jeynes, ZH Jafri, RP Webb, AC Kimber, MJ Ashwin (1997), In: SURFACE AND INTERFACE ANALYSIS25(4)pp. 254-260 JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
    I BRADLEY, WP GILLIN, KP HOMEWOOD, RP WEBB (1993), In: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS73(4)pp. 1686-1692 AMER INST PHYSICS
    G CARTER, R WEBB, R COLLINS, DA THOMPSON (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS40(1-2)pp. 119-121 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    RM GEATCHES, KJ REESON, AJ CRIDDLE, RP WEBB, PJ PEARSON, BL WEISS (1994), In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS27(7)pp. 1528-1532 IOP PUBLISHING LTD
    NP Barradas, C Jeynes, RP Webb, U Kreissig, R Grotzschel (1999), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS149(1-2)pp. 233-237 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    PMM Rombouts, I Gomez-Morilla, GW Grime, RP Webb, L Cuenca, R Rodriguez, M Browton, N Wardell, B Underwood, NF Kirkby, KJ Kirkby (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS260(1)pp. 231-235
    U BUSSMANN, PLF HEMMENT, RP WEBB, AK ROBINSON (1992), In: MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING B-SOLID STATE MATERIALS FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY12(1-2)pp. 73-76 ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA LAUSANNE
    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1983), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods In Physics Research218(1-3)pp. 697-702

    A molecular dynamics multiple interactions simulation computer code has been used to study the near-surface effect of cascade mixing due to ion bombardment. 90% of all moved atoms recoil forward or backward only one layer and 70% of all recoil atoms are displaced to their nearest neighbour positions. A comparison of the computed results and the results predicted from statistical theories indicates that both models would produce similar results if the lower limit in the energy threshold of the statistical theories were decreased sufficiently to include the movement of many more low energy recoils. A further comparison is made between the distributions of recoil-atom displacements at the end of the dynamic regime, and after the damaged crystallite has coalesced. There is a small degree of rearrangement, due to the collapse of collision spikes, but the resultant displacement distributions are similar. 漏 1983.

    Melanie Bailey, R Bradshaw, S Francese, T Salter, M De Puit, Catia Costa, M Ismail, I Bosman, K Wolff, Roger Webb (2015), In: The Analyst140pp. 6254-6259
    R Webb, M Bailey, C Jeynes, G Grime (2010), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms268(11-12)
    NH Peng, C Jeynes, R Webb, I Chakarov, DJ Kang, D Moore, M Blamire (2002), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS188pp. 189-195
    P Mistry, I Gomez-Morilla, RC Smith, D Thomson, GW Grime, RP Webb, R Gwilliam, C Jeynes, A Cansell, M Merchant, KJ Kirkby (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS260(1)pp. 437-441
    JA Sharp, NEB Cowern, RP Webb, D Giubertoni, S Gennaro, M Bersani, MA Foad, KJ Kirkby (2006), In: KJ Kirkby, D Chivers, R Gwilliam, A Smith (eds.), Ion Implantation Technology866pp. 33-36
    A Nejim, C Jeynes, RP Webb, NEB Cowern, CJ Patel (1997), In: TD delaRubia, S Coffa, PA Stolk, CS Rafferty (eds.), DEFECTS AND DIFFUSION IN SILICON PROCESSING469pp. 387-393
    NP Barradas, PK Marriott, C Jeynes, RP Webb (1998), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS136pp. 1157-1162
    IH WILSON, S CHERECKDJIAN, RP WEBB (1985), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS7-8(MAR)pp. 735-741 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    RM Geatches, KJ Reeson, AJ Criddle, MS Finney, MA Harry, RP Webb, PJ Pearson (1994), In: Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings316pp. 813-818

    In this paper, the technique of microscope-spectrophotometry, used to nondestructively characterize the microstructure of ion beam synthesized iron-disilicide layers, is described. The results obtained agree extremely well, in terms of layer thickness and interfacial roughness, with those from Rutherford backscattering. The results also show that it is possible to interpret the measured spectral reflectance data in terms of: 1) defect annealing; 2) iron redistribution; and 3) phase transformations from the 尾 to the 伪 phase.

    N Peng, C Jeynes, RM Gwilliam, RP Webb, F Pan, X Chen (2012), In: 18TH INTERNATIONAL VACUUM CONGRESS (IVC-18)32pp. 408-411
    GM Crean, C Jeynes, MG Somekh, RP Webb (1989), In: European Solid-State Device Research Conferencepp. 929-932

    漏 1989 Springer-Verlag Heidelberg. 漏 1989 Springer-Verlag Bcrbn Heidelberg. All Rights Reserved.This paper correlates photodisplacement thermal wave characterization of ion implanted silicon wafers with the lattice information provided by Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry.

    RP Webb, M Kerford, M Kappes, G Brauchle (1997), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS142(1-4)pp. 23-26 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    RP Webb (2006), In: M Rieth, W Schommers (eds.), Handbook of Theoretical and Computational Nanotechnology: Nanocomposites, nano-assemblies, and nanosurfaces(7)
    KJ Kirkby, GW Grime, RP Webb, NF Kirkby, M Folkard, K Prise, B Vojnovic (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS260(1)pp. 97-100
    RP Webb, L Hadzievski (2004), In: PHYSICS OF IONIZED GASES740pp. 117-131
    RP Webb, SH Winston, RM Gwilliam, BJ Sealy, G Boudreault, C Jeynes, KJ Kirkby (2003), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS202pp. 143-148
    WP GILLIN, I BRADLEY, KP HOMEWOOD, RP WEBB (1993), In: SOLID STATE COMMUNICATIONS85(3)pp. 197-198 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP WEBB, G CARTER (1981), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS59(1-2)pp. 69-76 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    AB FAIK, PJ CHANDLER, PD TOWNSEND, R WEBB (1986), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS98(1-4)pp. 233-241 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    RP Webb (2005), In: T Simos, G Maroulis (eds.), Advances in Computational Methods in Sciences and Engineering 2005, Vols 4 A & 4 B4A-4Bpp. 1002-1005
    RP Webb, M Kerford, M Kappes, G Brauchle (1997), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS122(3)pp. 318-321 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    RP WEBB, C JEYNES, IH WILSON (1986), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS13(1-3)pp. 449-452 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    LH ABUHASSAN, PD TOWNSEND, RP WEBB (1987), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS19-20pp. 927-930 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    IR CHAKAROV, RP WEBB, R SMITH, K BEARDMORE (1995), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS102(1-4)pp. 145-150 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    P Mistry, I Gornez-Morilla, GW Grime, R Webb, C Jeynes, R Gwilliam, A Cansell, M Merchant, KJ Kirkby (2005), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS231pp. 428-432
    RP WEBB, DE HARRISON, MM JAKAS (1986), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS15(1-6)pp. 1-7 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    MJ NOBES, RP WEBB, G CARTER, JL WHITTON (1980), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS50(3-6)pp. 133-138 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    DJ Kang, NH Peng, C Jeynes, R Webb, HN Lee, B Oh, SH Moon, G Burnell, NA Stelmashenko, EJ Tarte, DF Moore, MG Blamire (2003), In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY13(2)pp. 1071-1074
    G CARTER, DG ARMOUR, DC INGRAM, R WEBB, R NEWCOMBE (1979), In: RADIATION EFFECTS LETTERS43(6)pp. 233-236 GORDON BREACH PUBLISHING, TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP
    RP Webb, KJ Kirkby (2004), In: M Laudon, B Romanowicz (eds.), NSTI NANOTECH 2004, VOL 3, TECHNICAL PROCEEDINGSpp. 84-86
    M Kerford, RP Webb (1999), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS153(1-4)pp. 270-274
    RP Webb (1992), In: D Briggs, MP Seah (eds.), Practical Surface Analysis: Ion and neutral spectroscopy2(Append)pp. 657-704 John Wiley & Son Ltd
    NJ Bright, Roger Webb, Steven Hinder, Karen Kirkby, Neil Ward, John Watts, S Bleay, MJ Bailey (2012), In: Anal Chem84(9)pp. 4083-4087 American Chemical Society

    A new protocol using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) has been developed to identify the deposition order of a fingerprint overlapping an ink line on paper. By taking line scans of fragment ions characteristic of the ink molecules (m/z 358.2 and 372.2) where the fingerprint and ink overlap and by calculating the normalised standard deviation of the intensity variation across the line scan, it is possible to determine whether or not a fingerprint is above ink on a paper substrate. The protocol adopted works for a selection of fingerprints from four donors tested here and for a fingerprint that was aged for six months; for one donor, the very faint fingerprints could not be visualized using either standard procedures (ninhydrin development) or SIMS and therefore the protocol correctly gives an inconclusive result.

    RP WEBB, E MAYDELL (1988), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS33(1-4)pp. 117-121 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    M Stojanovic, P Osmokrovic, F Boreli, D Novkovic, R Webb (1997), In: THIN SOLID FILMS296(1-2)pp. 181-183 ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA LAUSANNE
    P Mistry, I Gomez-Morilla, GW Grime, RP Webb, R Gwilliam, A Cansell, M Merchant, KJ Kirkby, EJ Teo, MBH Breese, AA Bettiol, DJ Blackwood, F Watt (2005), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS237(1-2)pp. 188-192
    RP Webb, R Smith, I Chakarov, K Beardmore (1996), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS112(1-4)pp. 99-104 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    NH Peng, C Jeynes, RM Gwilliam, KJ Kirkby, RP Webb, GS Shao, DA Astill, WY Liang (2005), In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY15(2)pp. 3265-3268
    J THORNTON, RP WEBB, IH WILSON, KC PAUS (1988), In: SEMICONDUCTOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY3(4)pp. 281-285 IOP PUBLISHING LTD
    KJ REESON, RS SPRAGGS, RM GWILLIAM, RP WEBB, BJ SEALY, A DEVEIRMAN (1991), In: VACUUM42(18)pp. 1163-1171 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    MG Blamire, DJ Kang, G Burnell, NH Peng, R Webb, C Jeynes, JH Yun, SH Moon, B Oh (2002), In: VACUUM69(1-3)pp. 11-15
    B. N Murdin, Nathan Cassidy, David Cox, Roger Webb, Richard J Curry (2021), In: physica status solidi (b)2000615 Wiley

    The theoretical error rates in deterministic ion implantation when using an ion beam governed by a Poisson point process with a detector that counts the impacts are investigated. It is concluded that if the error rates are small, then for spots with nominally one implanted ion the probability of failure to implant the correct number is 鈮 饾渽/饾渾+饾渹鈳幆+饾渾/2 for a synchronous (i.e., pulsed) system or 饾惥/饾惪+饾渹鈳幆+饾惪饾憽s for an asynchronous (i.e., continuous beam) system, where 饾渹鈳幆 is the probability that the detector misses an ion impact, and 饾惪(饾惥) and 饾渾(饾渽) are the number of ions (dark counts) per unit time and per pulse, respectively. ts is the system reaction time for an asynchronous system. This approximation allows easy identification of the greatest need for engineering effort. Some experimental efforts to measure these parameters and their uncertainties are examined.

    Mahado Ismail, Derek Stevenson, Catia Costa, Roger Webb, M de Puit, Melanie Bailey (2018), In: Clinical Chemistry64(6)pp. 909-917 American Association for Clinical Chemistry

    BACKGROUND: Recent publications have explored the possibility of using fingerprints to confirm drug use, but none has yet dealt with environmental contamination from fingertips. Here we explored the possibility of establishing an environmental cutoff for drug testing from a single fingerprint. METHODS: Fingerprint samples (n=100) were collected from the hands of 50 nondrug users before and after handwashing to establish separate environmental cutoff values and testing protocols for cocaine, benzoylecgonine, heroin, and 6-monoacetylmorphine. The cutoff was challenged by testing the fingerprints of drug-free volunteers after shaking hands with drug users. Fingerprints from patients who testified to taking cocaine (n = 32) and heroin (n = 24) were also collected and analyzed. RESULTS: A different cutoff value needed to be applied, depending on whether the fingerprints were collected as presented or after handwashing. Applying these cutoffs gave a 0%false-positive rate from the drug-free volunteers. After application of the cutoff, the detection rate (compared to patient testimony) for washed hands of patients was 87.5% for cocaine use and 100% for heroin use. CONCLUSIONS: Fingerprints show enhanced levels of cocaine, heroin, and their respective metabolites in patients who testified to taking the substances, compared with the population of na谋篓ve drug users surveyed, and a cutoff (decision level) can be established. The cutoff is robust enough to account for small increases in analyte observed after secondary transfer.

    KM BARFOOT, SAM ALCHALABI, RP WEBB, BL WEISS (1986), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS98(1-4)pp. 249-257 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    G CARTER, R WEBB, R COLLINS (1978), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS37(1-2)pp. 21-32 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    IH Wilson, JB Xu, RAB Devine, RP Webb (1996), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS118(1-4)pp. 473-477 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    R Webb (1997), In: B Vujicic, S Djurovic, J Puric (eds.), PHYSICS OF IONIZED GASESpp. 165-165
    ZH JAFRI, C JEYNES, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1990), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS48(1-4)pp. 457-460 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    KM BARFOOT, T LAURSEN, JL WHITTON, BL WEISS, RP WEBB (1989), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS44(2)pp. 141-145 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    M Kah, AJ Smith, JJ Hamilton, SH Yeong, B Columbeau, R Gwilliam, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby (2008), In: EG Seebauer, YV Kondratenko, SB Felch, A Jain (eds.), ION IMPLANTATION TECHNOLOGY 20081066pp. 51-54
    RP Webb (2005), In: R Smith (eds.), Atomic and Ion Collisions in Solids and at Surfaces(7) Cambridge Univ Pr

    This book is an introduction to the application of computer simulation and theory in the study of the interaction of energetic particles (1 ev to the MeV range) with solid surfaces. The authors describe methods that are applicable both to hard collisions between nuclear cores of atoms down to soft interactions, where chemical effects or long-range forces dominate. The range of potential applications of the technique is enormous. In surface science, applications include surface atomic structure determination using ion scattering spectroscopy or element analysis using SIMS or other techniques that involve depth profiling. Industrial applications include optical or hard coating deposition, ion implantation in semiconductor device manufacture or nanotechnology. The techniques described will facilitate studying plasma-sidewall interaction in fusion devices. This book will be of interest to graduate students and researchers, both academic and industrial, in surface science, semiconductor engineering, thin-film deposition and particleSHsurface interactions in departments of physics, chemistry and electrical engineering.

    I CHAKAROV, BV KING, RP WEBB, R SMITH (1992), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS67(1-4)pp. 332-334 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    C Jeynes, NP Barradas, MJ Blewett, RP Webb (1998), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS136pp. 1229-1234
    M Hillenkamp, J Pfister, MM Kappes, RP Webb (1999), In: JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS111(22)pp. 10303-10313 AMER INST PHYSICS
    JA Sharp, NEB Cowern, RP Webb, D Giubertoni, S Gennaro, M Bersani, MA Foad, KJ Kirkby (2006), In: Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings912pp. 159-163

    Ultra-shallow B and BF 2 implants in silicon pre-amorphised with Ge have been activated using a scanning non-melt laser. The implants were activated either by using 1 or 10 laser scans. Isochronal 60s post-laser annealing between 700-1000掳C were then undertaken to study the deactivation and reactivation of the B. Both B and BF2 samples were implanted with a dose of 1脳10 15 B cm -2 at an effective energy of 500eV. The presence of F from the BF 2 implants, which is superimposed over the boron profile increases the sheet resistance of the initial fabricated junction (from 600-700 ohms/sq from B implants only to 750-1100 ohms/sq for BF2 implants). Fluorine also changes the deactivation and reactivation behaviour of the boron during the post-anneals by increasing the amount of deactivation of the boron. 漏 2006 Materials Research Society.

    RP Webb, IH Wilson (1985), In: Materials Research Society Symposia Proceedings45pp. 147-152

    A new geometrical theory of sputtering is extended to investigate the behaviour of interface mixing as a function of the angle of ion incidence. It is found that the amount of mixing peaks with the angle of incidence at different angles depending upon the depth of the interface. When the interface is at the surface the mixing parameter behaves as the sputtering yield and maximises around 70 degree , whilst deeper interfaces, around the damage range, have maximum mixing at normal incidence.

    BN Jones, V Palitsin, R Webb (2010), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS268(11-12)pp. 1714-1717
    Catia Costa, Janella De Jesus, Chelsea Nikula, Teresa Murta, Geoffrey W. Grime, Vladimir Palitsin, Roger Webb, Richard J.A. Goodwin, Josephine Bunch, Melanie Jane Bailey (2022), In: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry American Chemical Society

    Characterizing proton beam damage in biological materials is of interest to enable the integration of proton microprobe elemental mapping techniques with other imaging modalities. It is also of relevance to obtain a deeper understanding of mechanical damage to lipids in tissues during proton beam cancer therapy. We have developed a novel strategy to characterize proton beam damage to lipids in biological tissues based on mass spectrometry imaging. This methodology is applied to characterize changes to lipids in tissues ex vivo, irradiated under different conditions designed to mitigate beam damage. This work shows that performing proton beam irradiation at ambient pressure, as well as including the application of an organic matrix prior to irradiation, can reduce damage to lipids in tissues. We also discovered that, irrespective of proton beam irradiation, placing a sample in a vacuum prior to desorption electrospray ionization imaging can enhance lipid signals, a conclusion that may be of future benefit to the mass spectrometry imaging community.

    RP Webb, JJ Jimenez-Rodriguez, M Kerford, SRP Silva (1998), In: DIAMOND AND RELATED MATERIALS7(8)pp. 1163-1166
    H BERGSAKER, F LAMA, R SMITH, R WEBB (1993), In: VACUUM44(3-4)pp. 341-344 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP Webb (2008), In: APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE255(4)pp. 1223-1228 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    RP Webb, IH Wilson (2003), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS202pp. 217-223
    R WEBB, G CARTER, R COLLINS (1978), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS39(3-4)pp. 129-139 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    DJ Kang, R Speaks, NH Peng, R Webb, C Jeynes, WE Booij, EJ Tarte, DF Moore, MG Blamire (2001), In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY11(1)pp. 780-783
    K BEARDMORE, R SMITH, RP WEBB (1994), In: MODELLING AND SIMULATION IN MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING2(3)pp. 313-328 IOP PUBLISHING LTD
    R SMITH, RP WEBB (1991), In: PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE LETTERS64(5)pp. 253-260 TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
    R SMITH, RP WEBB (1994), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS130pp. 433-445 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    P Mistry, I Gomez-Morilla, GW Grime, R Webb, C Jeynes, R Gwilliarn, A Cansell, M Merchant, KJ Kirkby (2006), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS242(1-2)pp. 387-389
    JD Mody, RP Webb (2011), In: Surface and Interface Analysis43(1-2)pp. 92-94 Wiley

    The use of polyatomic (cluster) ion beams for SIMS has proven to be an efficient method for the characterization of solids. Computer simulation programs such as Molecular Dynamics (MD) are often run to gain an insight into the ion-solid interactions that take place under these circumstances; however, for simulations to be able to make accurate predictions, a massive amount of computational resources are required to be at hand. These include several months in simulation time and the use of very large targets, not to mention that a single simulation run is a representation of only a single ion trajectory. Thus, MD simulations are invaluable for gaining insight into ion-solid interactions but are less so for being able to provide information when time constraints are put in place. The work here aims to achieve a prediction model that, when completely functional, will be able to deal with the pressures of the clock. This, we believe, is achievable by employing simpler modeling criteria that are dependant upon aspects of an initial energy deposition profile within the target under irradiation. Copyright 漏 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

    RP Webb, M Ponomarev (2007), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS255(1)pp. 229-232
    M Richard, KJ Kirkby, RP Webb, NF Kirkby (2006), In: RADIATION RESEARCH166(4)pp. 680-681
    G FISCHER, G CARTER, R WEBB (1978), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS38(1-2)pp. 41-43 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    R SMITH, RP WEBB (1993), In: PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES441(1913)pp. 495-499 ROYAL SOC LONDON
    RM GEATCHES, KJ REESON, AJ CRIDDLE, RP WEBB, PJ PEARSON, PLF HEMMENT, A NEJIM (1994), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS84(2)pp. 258-264 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    WP GILLIN, AC KIMBER, DJ DUNSTAN, RP WEBB (1994), In: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS76(6)pp. 3367-3371 AMER INST PHYSICS
    MG Ponomarev, BJ Garrison, JC Vickerman, RP Webb (2011), In: Surface and Interface Analysis43(1-2)pp. 107-111
    J THORNTON, KC PAUS, RP WEBB, A ALBUYARON, GR BOOKER, IH WILSON (1989), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS39(1-4)pp. 389-392 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    R Webb (2004), In: APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE231pp. 59-63
    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1984), In: Nuclear Inst. and Methods in Physics Research, B2(1-3)pp. 660-665

    Multiple interaction computer simulations of bombardment cascades have been used to study the surface damage created by an ion. Qualitative information on the temporal evolution of the dynamic cascade is obtained from an animated movie of the process. A comparison is made between the final damage states of high energy-density trajectories. A number of ion-atom potential functions have been investigated over a wide range of ion energies. Only superficial differences are found. 漏 1984.

    Y Wakamatsu, H Yamada, S Ninomiya, BN Jones, T Seki, T Aoki, R Webb, J Matsuo (2010), In: AIP Conference Proceedings: 18th International Conference on Ion Implantation Technology1321pp. 233-236

    Secondary Ion Mass spectrometry (SIMS) has been generally used in the field of material sciences. In recent years, it has also been applied for molecular imaging of biological samples. Nevertheless, molecular ions derived from the large molecules (more than 1 kDa) were detected with very low sensitivity. Plasma desorption mass spectrometry (PDMS) is known as mass spectrometry for large organic molecule. In PDMS, fission fragments bombard samples and the impact induces molecular ionization by electronic excitation. Large organic molecules are detected by using swift heavy ions in SIMS. In this work, 6 MeV Cu4+ we irradiated angiotensin II, a class of peptides. The intact molecular ions generated by swift heavy ion irradiation were analyzed by time鈥恛f鈥恌light (TOF) measurement. The yields are compared with some other probe ions, bismuth or flurane. Swift heavy ion bombardment ionized large organic molecules more effectively than other probes. Therefore, high energy ion can be applied in high resolution molecular imaging.

    R SMITH, RP WEBB (1991), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS59pp. 1378-1382 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    MJ Bailey, C Jeynes, BJ Sealy, RP Webb, RM Gwilliam (2010), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS268(11-12)pp. 2051-2055
    M Kah, AJ Smith, JJ Hamilton, J Sharp, SH Yeong, B Colombeau, R Gwilliam, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby (2008), In: JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B26(1)pp. 347-350 A V S AMER INST PHYSICS

    The International Roadmap for Semiconductors requires ultrashallow, highly activated, abrupt dopant profiles in the source/drain extension regions, for technology nodes beyond 45 nm. The authors contrast B and BF2 implants in Si and silicon on insulator (SOI) substrates with and without a preamorphizing implant (PAI). The objective of the study is to compare between Si and SOI substrates, PAI and non-PAI condition, and B and BF2 implants. The results show the absence of the "reverse annealing effect" in BF2 implants, which is observed in B implants. The presence of F appears to impede the formation of boron interstitial clusters, which is shown in the case of B implant. The BF2 implants follow a similar trend for SOI and Si with and without PAI. (C) 2008 American Vacuum Society.

    M Richard, KJ Kirkby, RP Webb, NF Kirkby (2009), In: APPLIED RADIATION AND ISOTOPES67(3)pp. 443-446 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP Webb (2007), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS162(7-8)pp. 567-572
    C Jeynes, NP Barradas, PK Marriott, G Boudreault, M Jenkin, E Wendler, RP Webb (2003), In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS36(7)PII S0pp. R97-R126 IOP PUBLISHING LTD
    NP Barradas, C Jeynes, RP Webb, E Wendler (2002), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS194(1)PII S0168-pp. 15-25 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    G Carter, MJ Nobes, RP Webb (1981), In: Journal of Materials Science16(8)pp. 2091-2102

    The spatial variation of energy deposited in a solid can lead to local variations in sputtering yield at points on the surface neighbouring the point of ion impact. An approximate theory is developed to describe this local sputtering yield variation in terms of the local morphology. It is then shown how, if this local variation merely moderates the standard sputtering yield-projectile incidence angle function by multiplication, an erosion slowness theory can be simply modified and generalized to allow prediction of the time development of sputtered surface morphology. Both transient and steady-state morphologies are explored. 漏 1981 Chapman and Hall Ltd.

    IH WILSON, RP WEBB (1986), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS99(1-4)pp. 281-291 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    NS Bennett, AJ Smith, RM Gwilliam, RP Webb, BJ Sealy, NEB Cowern, L O'Reilly, PJ McNally (2008), In: JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B26(1)pp. 391-395 A V S AMER INST PHYSICS

    The creation of stable, highly conductive ultrashallow junctions in strained Si is a key requirement for future Si based devices. It is shown that in the presence of tensile strain, Sb becomes a strong contender to replace As as the dopant of choice due to advantages in junction depth, junction steepness, and crucially, sheet resistance. While 0.7% strain reduces resistance for both As and Sb, a result of enhanced electron mobility, the reduction is significantly larger for Sb due to an increase in donor activation. Differential Hall and secondary-ion mass spectroscopy measurements suggest this to be a consequence of a strain-induced Sb solubility enhancement following epitaxial regrowth, increasing Sb solubility in Si to levels approaching 10(21) cm(-3). Advantages in junction depth, junction steepness, and dopant activation make Sb an interesting alternative to As for ultrashallow doping in strain-engineered complementary metal-oxide semiconductor devices. (c) 2008 American Vacuum Society.

    D Perusko, MJ Webb, V Milinovic, B Timotijevic, M Milosavljevic, C Jeynes, RP Webb (2008), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms266(8)pp. 1749-1753
    RMA PEEL, D MILLEN, C JEYNES, RP WEBB (1994), In: R Miles, A Chalmers (eds.), PROGRESS IN TRANSPUTER AND OCCAM RESEARCH38pp. 87-97
    R Webb, B Garrison (2001), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS180pp. VII-VII ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    KD Krantzman, RP Webb, BJ Garrison (2008), In: Applied Surface Science255(4)pp. 837-840
    MA Foad, R Webb, R Smith, J Matsuo, A Al-Bayati, T T-Sheng-Wang, Cullis (2000), In: JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B18(1)pp. 445-449 A V S AMER INST PHYSICS
    RP Webb, R Smith, HH Al-Barwarni, IH Wilson (1997), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS141(1-4)pp. 211-222 TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
    R Smith, M Harrison, R Webb (1999), In: THIN SOLID FILMS343pp. 602-604 ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
    M Kerford, RP Webb (2001), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS180pp. 44-52
    H Zurrug, J Mefo, B Sealy, G Boudreault, C Jeynes, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby, EJH Collart, B Brown, TL Alford, M Nastasi, MC Vella (2003), In: IIT2002: ION IMPLANTATION TECHNOLOGY, PROCEEDINGSpp. 471-474
    Lidija Matjacic, Vladimir Palitsin, Julien Demarche, Lucio Rosa, Elis M. Stori, Roger Webb (2019), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms448pp. 1-4 Elsevier

    Ambient Pressure MeV SIMS (AP MeV SIMS) is a special application of MeV SIMS technique for molecular detection and imaging under ambient conditions. There are several advantages of using ambient over nonambient techniques such as minimising or completely avoiding sample preparation that can contribute to the reducing of costs and shortening of analysis. Moreover, by performing analysis in ambient conditions negative vacuum influence on samples will be avoided. The emergence of ambient mass spectrometry techniques over the past decade has been enormous with a broad range of applications such as food quality, environmental analysis and life sciences [1,2]. On the other hand, the disadvantage of ambient pressure mass spectrometry techniques is the influence of the ambient background which can suppress the signal from the target. In AP MeV SIMS, molecular species present in ambient surrounding of the sampling site will also be ionised by ion beams hence secondary ions originating from the sample have to be transported in the most efficient manner from the site of interaction of ion beams and target into the mass spectrometer capillary and, finally, into the mass spectrometer [3]. In this work, we present the optimisation of the mass spectrometer capillary temperature, distances of mass spectrometer and sheath gas, in our case helium, with respect to the beam axis and angle of the helium flow capillary with respect to the sample.

    SE Donnelly, G Greaves, JA Hinks, CJ Pawley, MF Beaufort, JF Barbot, E Oliviero, RP Webb (2014), In: Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings1645

    The MIAMI* facility at the University of Huddersfield is one of a number of facilities worldwide that permit the ion irradiation of thin foils in-situ in a transmission electron microscope. MIAMI has been developed with a particular focus on enabling the in-situ implantation of helium and hydrogen into thin electron transparent foils, necessitating ion energies in the range 1 - 10 keV. In addition, however, ions of a variety of species can be provided at energies of up to 100 keV (for singly charged ions), enabling studies to focus on the build up of radiation damage in the absence or presence of implanted gas. This paper reports on a number of ongoing studies being carried out at MIAMI, and also at JANNuS (Orsay, France) and the IVEM / Ion Accelerator Facility (Argonne National Lab, US). This includes recent work on He bubbles in SiC and Cu; the former work concerned with modification to bubble populations by ion and electron beams and the latter project concerned with the formation of bubble super-lattices in metals. A study is also presented consisting of experiments aimed at shedding light on the origins of the dimensional changes known to occur in nuclear graphite under irradiation with either neutrons or ions. Single crystal graphite foils have been irradiated with 60 keV Xe ions in order to create a non-uniform damage profile throughout the foil thickness. This gives rise to varying basal-plane contraction throughout the foil resulting in almost macroscopic (micron scale) deformation of the graphite. These observations are presented and discussed with a view to reconciling them with current understanding of point defect behavior in graphite.*Microscope and Ion Accelerator for Materials Investigations Copyright 漏 Materials Research Society 2014.

    M Temkin, I Chakarov, R Webb (2000), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS164pp. 74-81 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    G CARTER, DG ARMOUR, SE DONNELLY, R WEBB (1978), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS36(1-2)pp. 1-13 GORDON BREACH SCI PUBL LTD
    Catia Costa, Mahado Ismail, Derek Stevenson, Brian Gibson, Roger Webb, Melanie Bailey (2019), In: Journal of Analytical Toxicology Oxford University Press (OUP)

    Fingerprints have been proposed as a promising new matrix for drug testing. In previous work it has been shown that a fingerprint can be used to distinguish between drug users and non-users. Herein, we look at the possibility of using a fingerprint to distinguish between dermal contact and administration of heroin. Fingerprint samples were collected from (a) 10 patients attending a drug rehabilitation clinic (b) 50 non-drug users (c) participants who touched 2 mg street heroin, before and after various hand cleaning procedures. Oral fluid was also taken from the patients. All samples were analysed using a liquid chromatography 鈥 high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) method validated in previous work for heroin and 6-AM. The HRMS data was analysed retrospectively for morphine, codeine, 6-acetylcodeine and noscapine. Heroin and 6-AM were detected in all fingerprint samples produced from contact with heroin, even after handwashing. In contrast, morphine, acetylcodeine and noscapine were successfully removed after handwashing. In patient samples, the detection of morphine, noscapine and acetylcodeine (alongside heroin and 6-AM) gave a closer agreement to patient testimony on whether they had recently used heroin use than the detection of heroin and 6-AM alone. This research highlights the importance of washing hands prior to donating a fingerprint sample to distinguish recent contact with heroin from heroin use.

    RP Webb, DE Harrison (1981), In: Applied Physics Letters39(4)pp. 311-312

    A molecular dynamics simulation has been used to study the times at which atoms are ejected during sputtering events. Plots of the atom ejection time versus distance from the impact point indicate that many sputtering events occur along a roughly circular front that propagates outward at hypersonic speed.

    Mahado Ismail, M Baumert, Derek Stevenson, John Watts, Roger Webb, Catia Costa, F Robinson, Melanie Bailey (2016), In: Analytical Methods: advancing methods and applications9pp. 1839-1847 Royal Society of Chemistry

    Surface mass spectrometry methods can be difficult to use effectively with low cost, portable mass spectrometers. This is because commercially available portable (single quadrupole) mass spectrometers lack the mass resolution to confidently differentiate between analyte and background signals. Additionally, current surface analysis methods provide no facility for chromatographic separation and therefore are vulnerable to ion suppression. Here we present a new analytical method where analytes are extracted from a sample using a solvent flushed across the surface under high pressure, separated using a chromatography column and then analysed using a portable mass spectrometer. The use of chromatography reduces ion suppression effects and this, used in combination with in-source fragmentation, increases selectivity, thereby allowing high sensitivity to be achieved with a portable and affordable quadrupole mass spectrometer. We demonstrate the efficacy of the method for the quantitative detection of cocaine and benzoylecgonine in urine and oral fluid. The method gives relative standard deviations below 15% (with one exception), and R2 values above 0.998. The limits of detection for these analytes in oral fluid and urine are

    DJ Kang, G Burnell, SJ Lloyd, RS Speaks, NH Peng, C Jeynes, R Webb, JH Yun, SH Moon, B Oh, EJ Tarte, DF Moore, MG Blamire (2002), In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS80(5)pp. 814-816 AMER INST PHYSICS
    DJ Kang, NH Peng, R Webb, C Jeynes, JH Yun, SH Moon, B Oh, G Burnell, EJ Tarte, DF Moore, MG Blamire (2002), In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS81(19)pp. 3600-3602 AMER INST PHYSICS
    RP Webb, M Kerford (2001), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS180pp. 32-36
    R Webb, M Kerford, A Way (1999), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS153(1-4)pp. 309-313 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    DE Harrison, RP Webb (1983), In: Nuclear Instruments and Methods In Physics Research218(1-3)pp. 727-736

    Computer simulation of ion-bombardment events has been extended to coalesce and recrystallise the target, so that the surface damage created when a single ion strikes a metal surface can now be studied directly. Qualitative and quantitative information on pit formation, other surface damage and recoil mixing can be obtained from the model. Many characteristics of the target's final condition are evident before the excess energy has been removed. Small structured and faceted surface pits are found at 1.0 keV ion energy for both low and high energy-density potential functions. Atoms are only sputtered from the first two layers of the pit region. The rest of the pit is formed by atoms displaced laterally or downward, initiating replacement collision sequences. A movie has been produced which presents the temporal development and creation of surface damage, and demonstrates surface reconstruction processes. 漏 1983.

    RP Webb, J Mody (2009), In: RADIATION EFFECTS AND DEFECTS IN SOLIDS164(7-8)pp. 477-480
    RP Webb (2005), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS228pp. 9-15
    A T Kearsley, J L Colaux, D K Ross, P J Wozniakiewicz, L Gerlach, P Anz-Meador, T Griffin, B Reed, J Opiela, V V Palitsin, G W Grime, R P Webb, C Jeynes, J Spratt, T Salge, M J Cole, M C Price, M J Burchell (2017), In: Procedia Engineering204pp. 492-499 Elsevier

    Return of materials from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) during shuttle orbiter service missions has allowed inspection of large numbers of hypervelocity impact features from long exposure at about 615 km altitude in low Earth orbit (LEO) [1,2]. Here we describe the application of advanced X-ray microanalysis techniques on scanning electron microscopes (SEM), microprobes and a 2 MV Tandetron, to nearly 400 impacts on the painted metal surface of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) radiator shield [3,4]. We identified artificial Orbital Debris (OD) and natural Micrometeoroid (MM) origins for small [5] and even for larger particles [6], which usually may leave little or no detectable trace on HST solar arrays, as they penetrate through the full cell thickness [2,7].

    JA Sharp, NEB Cowern, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby, D Giubertoni, S Gennaro, M Bersani, MA Foad, F Cristiano, PF Fazzini (2006), In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS89(19)ARTN 1pp. ?-? AMER INST PHYSICS
    MT Langridge, DC Cox, RP Webb, V Stolojan (2014), In: MICRON57pp. 56-66 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP WEBB, SE DONNELLY, DG ARMOUR (1977), In: VACUUM27(9)pp. 559-563 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    NEB Cowern, AJ Smith, N Bennett, BJ Sealy, R Gwilliam, RP Webb, B Colombeau, S Paul, W Lerch, A Pakfar (2008), In: Materials Science Forum573-57pp. 295-304
    W. Iliffe, N. Peng, G. Brittles, R. Bateman, R. Webb, C. Grovenor, S. Speller (2021), In: Superconductor Science and Technology3409LT01 IOP Publishing

    An apparatus has been built to perform irradiation and electrical testing of REBCO coated conductors (CC) held below their critical temperature (Tc). Patterned tracks of Fujikura GdBCO CC were irradiated with 2 MeV He+ ions in steps up to 4 mdpa whilst held at 40 K, and the critical current density (Jc) determined from I鈥揤 characteristics. These 'in-situ' samples then underwent annealing experiments at room temperature. The superconducting performance, both before and after room temperature annealing, has been compared to equivalent samples irradiated at room temperature and then cooled for testing at 40 K to understand how the damage tolerance of these materials is affected by sample temperature. Details of the apparatus and experimental results from preliminary work are presented and discussed. These preliminary results show that both Tc and Jc values of patterned tracks degrade with irradiation dose, with most samples showing similar behaviour. The room temperature annealing of 'in-situ' irradiated samples resulted in a significant recovery of properties. We conclude that irradiation temperature does alter how the superconducting properties of GdBCO CC are affected by ion irradiation, and that this observation has implications for the design of high temperature superconducting magnets for future fusion reactors.

    R. W. Harrison, N. Peng, R. P. Webb, J. A. Hinks, S. E. Donnelly (2019), In: Fusion Engineering and Design138pp. 210-216 Elsevier

    Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ex-situ He ion irradiated bulk W has been performed to quantitatively compare the damage microstructure to that observed in regions of comparable thicknesses during in-situ ion irradiation with TEM experiments. Samples were irradiated to achieve He-appm/DPA ratios of 2000 and 500 at temperatures of 500 and 800鈥壜癈 to 1.5 and 3.0 DPA. For irradiations at 500鈥壜癈, bubble diameters (鈭2鈥塶m) were larger and areal bubble densities (鈭1012 bubbles/cm2) were lower than those in the in-situ experiments. This is attributed to greater amounts of He being retained in the ex-situ bulk experiments whereas in the in-situ experiments some may escape due to the proximity of surfaces. Dislocation loops were observed in all samples and were characterised as b = 卤陆 type with no b = type loops. Dislocation loop populations were dominated by interstitial type (鈭60%) agreeing with in-situ experiments. However, dislocation loops in this work were larger, ranging in size from 7 to 100鈥塶m and large concentrations of entangled dislocation lines were observed in the bulk of the grain as compared to in the in-situ experiments.

    ZH JAFRI, C JEYNES, RP WEBB, IH WILSON (1989), In: VACUUM39(11-12)pp. 1119-1121 PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    RP Webb, MA Foad, RM Gwilliam, AP Knights, G Thomas (1997), In: TD delaRubia, S Coffa, PA Stolk, CS Rafferty (eds.), DEFECTS AND DIFFUSION IN SILICON PROCESSING469pp. 59-63 MATERIALS RESEARCH SOCIETY
    M Richard, RP Webb, KJ Kirkby, NF Kirkby (2009), In: APPLIED RADIATION AND ISOTOPES67(3)pp. 440-442 Elsevier
    R Webb, M Kerford, E Ali, M Dunn, L Knowles, K Lee, J Mistry, F Whitefoot (2001), In: SURFACE AND INTERFACE ANALYSIS31(4)pp. 297-301
    JANELLA MARIE DE JESUS, Josephine Bunch, Guido Verbeck, Roger Webb, Catia Costa, Richard Goodwin, Melanie Bailey (2018), In: Analytical Chemistry90(20)pp. 12094-12100 American Chemical Society

    Direct analyte-probed nano-extraction (DAPNe) is a method of extracting material from a microscale region of a sample and provides the opportunity for detailed mass spectrometry analysis of extracted analytes from a small area. The technique has been shown to provide enhanced sensitivity compared with bulk analysis by selectively removing analytes from their matrix and has been applied for selective analysis of single cells and even single organelles. However, the quantitative capabilities of the technique are yet to be fully evaluated. In this study, various normalisation techniques were investigated in order to improve the quantitative capabilities of the technique. Two methods of internal standard incorporation were applied to test substrates, which were designed to replicate biological sample matrices. Additionally, normalisation to the extraction spot area and matrix compounds were investigated for suitability in situations when an internal standard is not available. The variability observed can be significantly reduced by using a sprayed internal standard, and in some cases, by normalising to the extracted area.

    Catia Costa, Roger Webb, Vladimir Palitsin, Mahado Ismail, Marcel de Puit, Samuel Atkinson, Melanie Bailey (2017), In: Clinical Chemistry63(11)pp. 1745-1752 American Association for Clinical Chemistry

    BACKGROUND: Paper spray mass spectrometry6 is a technique that has recently emerged and has shown excellent analytical sensitivity to a number of drugs in blood. As an alternative to blood, fingerprints have been shown to provide a noninvasive and traceable sampling matrix. Our goal was to validate the use of fingerprint samples to detect cocaine use. METHODS: Samples were collected on triangular pieces (168 mm2) of washed Whatman Grade I chromatography paper. Following application of internal standard, spray solvent and a voltage were applied to the paper before mass spectrometry detection. A fingerprint visualization step was incorporated into the analysis procedure by addition of silver nitrate solution and exposing the sample to ultraviolet light. RESULTS: Limits of detection for cocaine, benzoylecgonine, and methylecgonine were 1, 2, and 31 ng/mL respectively, with relative standard deviations of less than 33%. No matrix effects were observed. Analysis of 239 fingerprint samples yielded a 99% true-positive rate and a 2.5% false-positive rate, based on the detection of cocaine, benzoylecgonine, or methylecgonine with use of a single fingerprint. CONCLUSIONS: The method offers a qualitative and noninvasive screening test for cocaine use. The analysis method developed is rapid (4 min/sample) and requires no sample preparation.

    NP TOGNETTI, RP WEBB, CE CHRISTODOULIDES, DG ARMOUR, G CARTER (1981), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS182(APR)pp. 107-114 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    R Webb, M Kerford, A Way, I Wilson (1999), In: NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION B-BEAM INTERACTIONS WITH MATERIALS AND ATOMS153(1-4)pp. 284-291 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV