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  2. Electron beam ion trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_beam_ion_trap

    Electron beam ion trap (EBIT) is an electromagnetic bottle that produces and confines highly charged ions. An EBIT uses an electron beam focused with a powerful magnetic field to ionize atoms to high charge states by successive electron impact. It was invented by M. Levine and R. Marrs at LLNL and LBNL. [1]

  3. Ion source - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_source

    They can generate even bare ions of mid-heavy elements. The Electron beam ion trap (EBIT), based on the same principle, can produce up to bare uranium ions and can be used as an ion source as well. Heavy ions can also be generated with an ion gun which typically uses the thermionic emission of electrons to ionize a substance in its gaseous ...

  4. EBIT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBIT

    EBIT, Ebit or ebit may refer to: EBIT, or Earnings before interest and taxes, in finance; EBIT, or Electron beam ion trap, in physics; An ebit (quantum state), a two-party quantum state with quantum entanglement and the fundamental unit of bipartite entanglement; Exabit, the symbol for the decimal unit of information storage

  5. Ion beam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_beam

    An ion beam is a beam of ions, a type of charged particle beam. Ion beams have many uses in electronics manufacturing (principally ion implantation) and other industries. There are many ion beam sources, some derived from the mercury vapor thrusters developed by NASA in the 1960s. The most widely used ion beams are of singly-charged ions.

  6. Ion beam deposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_beam_deposition

    Ion beam deposition (IBD) is a process of applying materials to a target through the application of an ion beam. [1] Ion beam deposition setup with mass separator. An ion beam deposition apparatus typically consists of an ion source, ion optics, and the deposition target. Optionally a mass analyzer can be incorporated. [2]

  7. Debye–Hückel theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debye–Hückel_theory

    It is a linearized Poisson–Boltzmann model, which assumes an extremely simplified model of electrolyte solution but nevertheless gave accurate predictions of mean activity coefficients for ions in dilute solution. The Debye–Hückel equation provides a starting point for modern treatments of non-ideality of electrolyte solutions.

  8. Pitzer equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitzer_equations

    Besides the well-known Pitzer-like equations, there is a simple and easy-to-use semi-empirical model, which is called the three-characteristic-parameter correlation (TCPC) model. It was first proposed by Lin et al. [22] It is a combination of the Pitzer long-range interaction and short-range solvation effect: ln γ = ln γ PDH + ln γ SV

  9. Reflectron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflectron

    A post-source decay (PSD) is a process specific to the ion source utilizing matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization and operating in vacuum. In the post-source decay, parent ions (typically of several keV kinetic energy) fragment in a process of laser-induced fragmentation or high-energy collision-induced dissociation (HE CID).