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Introduction to Helium-Neon Laser Gas

Introduction to Helium-Neon Laser Gas

          The helium-neon gas mixture is one of the most common and useful laser mediums. It is used extensively in continuous wave gas lasers emitting visible red light. Some background on the He-Ne laser gas combination:     Consists primarily of 90% helium and 10% neon by volume Helium provides high energy transfer efficie...

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Introduction to the Future Market Outlook for Xenon Gas

Introduction to the Future Market Outlook for Xenon Gas

        Xenon is a rare noble gas used in specialized lighting, medical, propulsion and imaging applications. With emerging technologies and global development, the future market prospects for xenon look promising despite its scarcity. Some growth factors include:       Expanding lighting markets – Automotive HID lamps use xenon. Growth in...

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Applications of Argon Fluoride Lasers

Applications of Argon Fluoride Lasers

        The unique 193 nanometer wavelengthoutput of argon fluoride excimer lasers has enabled numerous advanced applications:     Photolithography – ArF lasers are critical in semiconductor chip manufacturing to pattern small features. Laser surgery – The 193nm light can ablate biological tissue with precision. UV curing ...

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How Argon Fluoride Excimer Lasers Work

How Argon Fluoride Excimer Lasers Work

        The lasing action in argon fluoride excimer lasers arises through the following process: Electric discharge passes through the Ar/F2 gas mix, creating Ar+ ions and electrons. Accelerated electrons collide with and excite argon atoms. Excited argon atoms Ar* react with fluorine molecules to form the excimer ArF* in an excited st...

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Introduction to Argon Fluoride Excimer Laser Gas

Introduction to Argon Fluoride Excimer Laser Gas

       Argon fluoride (ArF) is an excimer gas mixture used widely in deep ultraviolet excimer lasers. The term ‘excimer’ refers to the excited dimer state formed temporarily between an inert noble gas and a reactive halogen component. Some key properties:     Composition – Typically contains 0.1% F2 and 99.9% argon ...

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Industrial Production Methods for Boron Trifluoride

Industrial Production Methods for Boron Trifluoride

      Owing to its hazards, boron trifluoride gas is never isolated in nature, but is produced industrially from various BF3-containing precursors. There are two main production routes:       Fluorination of Boron Oxides – Boron oxide reacts with anhydrous hydrogen fluoride at 250-500°C to replace oxygen with fluorine. Various boron oxid...

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Chemical Reactivity and Uses of Boron Trifluoride

Chemical Reactivity and Uses of Boron Trifluoride

        Boron trifluoride is notable for its strong Lewis acidity which makes it highly reactive with compounds having lone electron pairs. This property allows BF3 to serve several industrial chemical roles:   Fluorination agent – BF3 assists in replacing C-H bonds with C-F bonds in organic precursor compounds. This fluorination produc...

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Introduction to the Properties of Boron Trifluoride

Introduction to the Properties of Boron Trifluoride

      Boron trifluoride, with the chemical formula BF3, is an inorganic boron compound consisting of boron bound to three fluorine atoms in a trigonal planar molecular geometry. Here are some key properties of this colorless gas:         At standard temperature and pressure, BF3 is a non-flammable diatomic gas. It condenses to a liquid at -100°C...

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Emerging Uses and Applications of Carbon Tetrafluoride

Emerging Uses and Applications of Carbon Tetrafluoride

      While carbon tetrafluoride has well-established uses as a dielectric gas and plasma etchant, emerging applications continue to take advantage of its unique properties:     precursor for fluoropolymer synthesis – CF4 plasma aids deposition of protective fluorocarbon polymer films and powders nuclear fuel conversion – CF4 ca...

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Production Methods for Carbon Tetrafluoride

Production Methods for Carbon Tetrafluoride

    Carbon tetrafluoride is a completely anthropogenic compound that does not occur naturally. There are two primary industrial synthesis routes to producing CF4:     Direct Fluorination – This involves reacting elemental carbon with excess elemental fluorine gas at high temperatures of 300-400°C. It directly replaces all hydrogen atoms i...

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Toxicity and Environmental Profile of Carbon Tetrafluoride

Toxicity and Environmental Profile of Carbon Tetrafluoride

      While highly useful industrially, carbon tetrafluoride has some negative environmental and health attributes that must be considered responsibly:       In its normal gaseous form, CF4 poses little acute toxicity hazard for humans. However, in confined spaces it acts as a simple asphyxiant by displacing breathable oxygen. Long-ter...

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Electrical Properties and Applications of Carbon Tetrafluoride

Electrical Properties and Applications of Carbon Tetraflu...

      Some of carbon tetrafluoride’s most useful attributes relate to its electric and dielectric characteristics. When subjected to strong electrical fields, CF4 decomposes to release highly reactive fluoride ions and electrons.       In addition to etching applications, carbon tetrafluoride also assists with thin film depositions in semi...

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