Research has demonstrated that Positron Annihilation Induced Auger Spectroscopy (PAES) can be used to probe the top-most atomic layer of surfaces and to obtain Auger spectra that are completely free of beam-impact induced secondary background. The high degree of surface selectivity in PAES is a result of the fact that positrons implanted at low energies are trapped with high efficiency at an image-correlation potential well at the surface resulting in almost all of the positrons annihilating with atoms in the top-most layer. Secondary electrons associated with the impact of the incident positrons can be eliminated by a suitable choice of an incident beam energy. In this paper we present the results of measurements of the energy spectrum of ...