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AES Instrumentation: Auger Process

The basic Auger process starts with removal of an inner shell atomic electron to form a vacancy. Several processes are capable of producing the vacancy, but bombardment with an electron beam is the most common. The inner shell vacancy is filled by a second atomic electron from a higher shell. Energy must be simultaneously released. A third electron, the Auger electron, escapes carrying the excess energy in a radiationless process. The process of an excited ion decaying into a doubly charged ion by ejection of an electron is called the Auger process. Alternatively, an X-ray photon removes the energy. For low atomic number elements, the most probable transitions occur when a K-level electron is ejected by the primary beam, an L-level electron drops into the vacancy, and another L-level electron is ejected. Higher atomic number elements have LMM and MNN transitions that are more probable than KLL.

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The figure illustrates two competing paths for energy dissipation with titanium as an example. The illustrated LMM Auger electron energy is ~423 eV (EAuger = EL2 - EM4 - EM3) and the X-ray photon energy is ~457.8 (Ehv = EL2 - EM4).