Evaporation Materials
ATT offers high purity evaporation materials at a competitive price. We have a large number of various evaporation materials in stock and provide customized services. Materials are often packaged within the sizes required.
Product Code : EM-Au-5N-Cu
Gold is one of the more beautiful precious metals with a lustrous, yellow sheen. It has a melting point of 1,064°C, a density of 19.3 g/cc, and a vapor pressure of 10-4 Torr at 1,132°C with its ideal evaporation temperature being around 1,400°C. It is soft, dense, malleable, ductile, and an excellent conductor of heat and electricity.
Product Code : EM-Ge-5N-Cu
Germanium (Ge) is a widely used material for evaporative coating processes. It is used to deposit layers of thin films on substrates such as glass, metals, and plastics. Germanium is widely utilized for tooling and components for optical, medical, and consumer electronics applications.
Product Code : EM-Gd-5N-Cu
Gadolinium is a rare earth metal that is used as a vaporization material in a variety of applications, including optical fibers, medical imaging, and semiconductor manufacturing. When used in an evaporator, gadolinium is heated to high temperatures in order to create a vapor that deposits onto surfaces and forms films.
Product Code : EM-Eu-5N-Cu
Europium is a silvery-white metallic element with an atomic number of 63, and is used in various applications such as electronics, lighting and lasers. Commonly known as Eu, Europium is a relatively rare element in the Earth's crust, and is most often obtained through the extraction and refinement of monazite from mineral deposits.
Product Code : EM-Er-5N-Cu
Erbium is one of the rare earth elements among Lanthanide series. Pure Erbium metal is malleable, soft, and fairly stable in air. Erbium ions fluoresce pink light are used in imaging and optical applications. Erbium oxidizes slower than some other rare-earth metals and has a high electrical resistivity.
Product Code : EM-Dy-5N-Cu
High purity dysprosium evaporation materials play a huge role in deposition processes to ensure high quality deposited film. Dysprosium is a rare earth element that originated from the Greek ‘dysprositos’, meaning hard to get. It is never found in nature as a free element, though it is found in various minerals, such as xenotime.