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Interpretation of complex x-ray photoelectron peak shapes. II. Case study of Fe 2p3/2 fitting applied to austenitic stainless steels 316 and 304

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posted on 2024-09-18, 04:07 authored by AE Hughes, CD Easton, TR Gengenbach, MC Biesinger, Majid LalehMajid Laleh
In this paper, a review of the analysis of Fe 2p3/2 peak and other transition metals in the austenitic stainless steel literature is presented. It reveals the significant shortcomings of the most widely used approaches, based on the principle of “chemistry fitting,” where single symmetric peaks are used to represent either individual oxidation states or specific compounds. No meaningful conclusions can be drawn from these commonly employed two- or three-component peak fitting (2C and 3C) approaches; the implication being that a large portion of the literature that relies on this approach is flawed. As a significantly more accurate and reliable alternative to “chemistry fitting,” we also assess “envelope fitting” (using empirical multiplet structures) and examine its limitations when applying the approach to austenitic stainless steel data. A detailed comparison of these two fitting approaches is described in Part I. For other elements such as Cr 2p, the problems associated with using single components to represent oxidation states or compounds are not as severe. It was found that it does not impact binding energy measurements, but does influence relative intensities, which will have a flow-on effect for oxide thickness calculations and obtaining a correct understanding of the surface more broadly.

History

Journal

Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A

Volume

42

Article number

ARTN 053206

Pagination

1-14

Location

Melville, N.Y.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0734-2101

eISSN

1520-8559

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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