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Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 864–867 (2000)

New Mechanism for Electron Emission from Planar Cold Cathodes: The Solid-State Field-Controlled Electron Emitter

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Vu Thien Binh1,* and Ch. Adessi2
1Laboratoire d'Emission Electronique, DPM-CNRS, Université Lyon 1, 69622, Villeurbanne, France
2Laboratoire de Physique Moléculaire, Université de Franche-Comté, 25030, Bescançon, France

Received 23 February 2000; published in the issue dated 24 July 2000

See accompanying Physics Focus

A new mechanism for electron emission from planar cathodes is described. The theoretical analysis shows that, with an ultrathin wide band-gap semiconductor layer (UTSC) on a metal, the surface barrier is lowered to 0.1 eV due to the creation of a space charge induced by the electrons injected from the metal. The barrier height depends mostly on the UTSC thickness and not on the state of the surface, as in thermionic and field emissions. This mechanism explains the measured stable emission at 300 K and 10-7 Torr, with a threshold field of only 50 V/μm, from these solid-state field-controlled emitters.

© 2000 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.864
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.864
PACS:
79.70.+q, 85.30.De, 85.45.Bz, 85.45.Db

*Corresponding author.Email address: vuthien@dpm.univ-lyon1.fr