J.H. Kaufman, Owen R. Melroy, et al.
Synthetic Metals
Photoemission and inverse photoemission (or bremsstrahlung spectroscopy) are shown to be complementary techniques for probing occupied and unoccupied electronic states, respectively. The momentum of delocalized valence states can be measured as well as their energy if low electron (photon) energies in the 10–40 eV range are used. Thus, energy band dispersions are obtained for bulk, surface, and adsorbate states which cannot be determined by other techniques. A status report of inverse photoemission is given and illustrated by results for bulk states in ferromagnets and silicides, for broken bond states on silicon surfaces, and for unoccupied molecular adsorbate orbitals. © 1984, American Vacuum Society. All rights reserved.
J.H. Kaufman, Owen R. Melroy, et al.
Synthetic Metals
T.N. Morgan
Semiconductor Science and Technology
Peter J. Price
Surface Science
R. Ghez, J.S. Lew
Journal of Crystal Growth