Ion formation and kinetic electron emission during the impact of slow atomic metal particles on metal surfaces

The charge distributions of slow atomic particles that are singly scattered, multiply scattered, recoiled, and sputtered from metal surfaces are analyzed in terms of both nonadiabatic particle-substrate electron transfer and electron transfer from electronically excited substrates. The results are compared to experimental data for 50 eV Na{sup +} ions scattered from Cu(001), and Al atoms sputtered and recoiled from Al(100). The comparison allows for a quantitative determination of the role of substrate excitations in surface charge exchange. In addition, an analysis of kinetic electron emission (KEE) is carried out using similar low-energy metal projectile-metal substrate systems. Contributions to KEE from various nonadiabatic processes are quantitatively evaluated, including the same process that is responsible for charge formation in single-scattering experiments. The results are compared to experimental KEE data induced by Na{sup +} impinging on Ru(0001). The contributions of nonadiabatic one-electron processes are shown to be small when realistic particle-substrate parameters are used. Many-electron interactions are assumed to play an important role in explaining KEE and, as an illustration, a simplified hot-spot model is outlined.