If one had a metal block (lets say tantalum) in a vacuum chamber, what would be the most efficient way of evaporating it in regards to the proportion of the input energy directly going into removing atoms from the metal into a vapor. From researching around a bit, it seems that there are three main techniques to do this:
Placing the metal block into a crucible, like boron nitride and heat with a filament joule heater.
Sputtering of the metal block using a biased ion plasma
Directly heating the metal via a laser beam
Now I imagine that out of these three, laser heating would be the most efficient due to the direct illumination of the surface by the laser so the efficiency is primarily limited by the reflectivity of the metal. But I am unsure as I have not seen much data around regarding any limits regarding the evaporation efficiency of the first two methods.
Does anyone know what is the most efficient evaporation process in a vacuum? Are there any fundamental limits to the efficiency of the evaporation process here for each technique?