Is Evaporative Cooling Causing Pressure Drop in Vacuum Chamber?

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The user is experiencing a pressure drop in a vacuum chamber during insulator deposition with siloxane liquid, which is affecting the process. They are questioning whether the drop in pressure is due to evaporative cooling of the liquid, which would lower its vapor pressure. They seek formulas to calculate vapor pressure versus temperature and the cooling rate of the liquid in a vacuum, as well as the potential inaccuracy of their pressure gauge in the presence of siloxane. Additionally, they are open to other explanations for the pressure drop and inquire about the relevance of Boyle's law. The discussion highlights the complexities of managing vapor pressure and temperature in vacuum deposition processes.
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I am having a problem at work and I'm hoping some of the brains on this board can help.

I'm using a Focused Ion beam to induce insulator deposition using a siloxane liquid. The liquid is stored in a small container with a valve to let the gas escape the container. This small container is located inside a vacuum chamber.

The vacuum chamber has a pressure of 1.5e-6 millibar when the siloxane valve is closed.

When the valve is opened I see the pressure rise to 8.0e-6 which is where I want to perform deposition.

As I watch the pressure I notice a slow linear drop with time. This effect causes the deposition process to fail.

As far as I know the chamber pressure is determined by the vapor pressure of the liquid and the size of the valve(which also has a limiting aperture in it)

My questions are:
1. Is this pressure drop due to the temperature of the liquid dropping due to evaporative cooling? This drop in temperature would also drop the vapor pressure right?

2. Is there a formula to calculate the vapor pressure vs temperature, or to calculate how fast the liquid will cool in the presence of a vacuum? or some other formula to help me characterize this effect.

3. Could the gauge used to measure the pressure level become inaccurate in the presence of an insulator like siloxane? It's a hot cathode Ionization gauge.

4. Is there something else that could be going on that I haven't mentioned.

Thanks for any help
 
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Would Boyle's law's be of any help?
 
I don't know, where do I find information on this law?

Thanks
 
I had found several citations when I ran a google search.
 
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