We present a general algorithm for the simulation of x-ray spectra emitted from targets of arbitrary composition bombarded with kilovolt electron beams. Electron and photon transport is simulated by means of the general-purpose Monte Carlo code PENELOPE, using the standard, detailed simulation scheme. Bremsstrahlung emission is described by using a recently proposed algorithm, in which the energy of emitted photons is sampled from numerical cross-section tables, while the angular distribution of the photons is represented by an analytical expression with parameters determined by fitting benchmark shape functions obtained from partial-wave calculations. Ionization of K and L shells by electron impact is accounted for by means of ionization cross sections calculated from the distorted-wave Born approximation. The relaxation of the excited atoms following the ionization of an inner shell, which proceeds through emission of characteristic x rays and Auger electrons, is simulated until all vacancies have migrated to M and outer shells. For comparison, measurements of x-ray emission spectra generated by 20 keV electrons impinging normally on multiple bulk targets of pure elements, which span the periodic system, have been performed using an electron microprobe. Simulation results are shown to be in close agreement with these measurements.
An algorithm for the simulation of bremsstrahlung emission by fast electrons using numerical cross sections is described. It is based on natural factorization of the double-differential cross section and on the fact that the intrinsic angular distribution of photons with a given energy can be very closely approximated by a Lorentz-boosted dipole distribution. The parameters of this angular distribution vary smoothly with the atomic number of the target atom and with the energies of the projectile’s electron and the photon emitted. Results from simulations of thick-target bremsstrahlung are compared with experimental data.
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