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Ernst Bauer | |
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Born | Germany | February 27, 1928
Nationality | American and German |
Alma mater | Universität München |
Known for | Pioneering Low Energy Electron Microscopy |
Awards | Gaede Prize of the German Vacuum Society (1988) Medard W. Welch Award of the American Vacuum Society (1992) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics |
Institutions | Arizona State University |
Ernst G. Bauer (born February 27, 1928) is a German-American physicist known for his studies in the field of surface science, thin film growth and nucleation mechanisms and the invention in 1962 of the Low Energy Electron Microscopy (LEEM). In the early 1990s, he extended the LEEM technique in two directions by developing Spin-Polarized Low Energy Electron Microscopy (SPLEEM) and Spectroscopic Photo Emission and Low Energy Electron Microscopy (SPELEEM). He is currently Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus at the Arizona State University.
Ernst Bauer studied at the Universität München, Germany, where he received his master's degree MS (1953) and Doctor of Philosophy PhD (1955) degrees in physics. In 1958 he moved to the Michelson Laboratory in China Lake, California, where he became the Head of the Crystal Physics Branch and a U.S. citizen. He assumed the position of Professor and Director of the Physics Institute at the Technical University Clausthal, Germany, in 1969. He was appointed Distinguished Research Professor in 1991 at the Arizona State University. He continued his research activity in Germany until 1996. Since 1996 he has worked full-time at the Arizona State University, and since 2010 he is Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus working part-time in ASU.
Bauer has contributed to the field of epitaxy and film growth since the mid-1950s. He started his scientific career in Munich with the study of the growth and structure of antireflection layers with electron microscopy and electron diffraction. His PhD thesis was concerned with the structure and growth of thin evaporated layers of ionic materials and was the first systematic extensive study of epitaxial and fiber orientation growth combining electron microscopy and electron diffraction. He derived in 1958 a classification of the basic thin film growth modes, which he called Frank-van der Merwe (layer-by-layer growth), Volmer-Weber (island growth) and Stranski-Krastanov growth (layer+island growth). His thermodynamic criterion and terminology are used worldwide today. In the same year Bauer's book on "Electron diffraction: theory, practice and application" appeared.
Soon after his arrival at the Michelson Laboratory in California, he started in situ thin film growth studies by conventional electron microscopy, Ultra high vacuum UHV reflection electron diffraction, Low-energy electron diffraction LEED and Auger electron spectroscopy. The importance of adsorption on the initial growth of thin films led him also to adsorption studies.
Bauer realized already in 1961 that electron microscopy using the diffracted electrons for imaging would be extremely important for the future of the surface science. The invention in 1962 of the Low Energy Electron Microscope (LEEM) was stimulated by a scientific dispute with Lester Germer about his interpretation of low energy electron diffraction (LEED) patterns in 1960. He constructed the first LEEM instrument and reported it at the Fifth International Congress for Electron Microscopy in 1962. In the 1960s he developed also the theoretical background needed for the understanding of LEEM.
After he moved to the Technical University Clausthal (Germany) in 1969 Bauer built up a broadly based surface science group encompassing a large variety of electron and ion beam techniques as well as optical methods. The quantitative analysis of thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS or TPD) was developed, a method now used widely in particular in surface chemistry. Work function measurements were developed and used for the determination of the thermodynamic properties of two-dimensional systems with attractive lateral interactions. He developed electron stimulated desorption (ESD) and static SIMS for the study of adsorbed layers and ultrathin films on single crystal surfaces; alkali ion scattering (ISS) for structural analysis of surfaces; field ion microscopy (FIM) of single atoms and clusters; UHV-SEM studies of surface melting.
Bauer invented Low Energy Electron Microscopy (LEEM) already in 1962 but he had to overcome intense skepticism of scientists and also many scientific and funding obstacles before finally LEEM came to fruition in 1985. His work was brought to the attention of a much wider general scientific community in the nineteen eighties, when LEEM began producing the real-time high-resolution dynamic image recordings of atomic processes such as crystal nucleation and growth, sublimation, phase transitions and epitaxy on surfaces. The high signal intensities available in LEEM (compared to X-ray imaging) allowed observing surface structure and dynamic processes in real space and real time at sample temperatures up to 1500 K with 10 nm lateral resolution and atomic depth resolution.
In the late 1980s early 1990s Bauer extended the LEEM technique in two important directions by developing Spin-Polarized Low Energy Electron Microscopy (SPLEEM) and Spectroscopic Photo Emission and Low Energy Electron Microscopy (SPELEEM). The combination of these methods now allows a comprehensive (structural, chemical, magnetic and electronic) characterization of surfaces and thin films on the 10 nm scale.
The success of the instrument developments in Bauer's group in Technical University Clausthal has led to the commercial production of these instruments and stimulated several other groups to develop similar instruments for surface imaging with low energy electrons, resulting in a variety of commercial instruments. Today there are hundreds of the various versions of these instruments in the world and are further developed, continuously broadening their application range. Bauer's work directly or indirectly impacts many areas of modern materials science: surfaces, thin films, electronic materials, catalysis and instrumentation. The invention and development of surface microscopy with low energy electrons has revolutionized the study of surface science and thin film science.
Bauer has authored or co-authored more than 470 publications (among them 88 review papers and book chapters) and two books: "Electron Diffraction: Theory, Practice and Applications", 1958 (in German) and “Surface Microscopy with Low Energy Electrons”, 2014.