English

Simulating multiscale gated field emitters -- a hybrid approach

Applied Physics 2021-12-10 v2 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Accelerator Physics Computational Physics Plasma Physics

Abstract

Multi-stage cathodes are promising candidates for field emission due to the multiplicative effect in local field predicted by the Schottky conjecture and its recent corrected counterpart [J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 38, 023208 (2020)]. Due to the large variation in length scales even in a 2-stage compound structure consisting of a macroscopic base and a microscopic protrusion, the simulation methodology of a gated field emitting compound diode needs to be revisited. As part of this strategy, the authors investigate the variation of local field on the surface of a compound emitter near its apex and find that the generalized cosine law continues to hold locally near the tip of a multi-scale gated cathode. This is used to emit charges with appropriate distributions in position and velocity components with a knowledge of only the electric field at the apex. The distributions are consistent with contemporary free-electron field emission model and follow from the joint distribution of launch angle, total energy, and normal energy. For a compound geometry with local field enhancement by a factor of around 1000, a hybrid model is used where the vacuum field calculated using COMSOL is imported into the Particle-In-Cell code PASUPAT where the emission module is implemented. Space charge effects are incorporated in a multi-scale adaptation of PASUPAT using a truncated geometry with `open electrostatic boundary' condition. The space charge field, combined with the vacuum field, is used for particle-emission and tracking.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2011.03278,
  title  = {Simulating multiscale gated field emitters -- a hybrid approach},
  author = {Shreya Sarkar and Raghwendra Kumar and Gaurav Singh and Debabrata Biswas},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.03278},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

8 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T19:57:30.628Z