| Literature DB >> 20400843 |
Abstract
Silicon is a material well suited for refractive lenses operating at high X-ray energies (>50 keV), particularly if implemented in a single-crystal form to minimize small-angle scattering. A single-crystal silicon saw-tooth refractive lens, fabricated by a dicing process using a thin diamond wheel, was tested with 115 keV X-rays, giving an ideal 17 microm line focus width in a long focal length, 2:1 ratio demagnification geometry, with a source-to-focus distance of 58.5 m. The fabrication is simple, using resources typically available at any synchrotron facility's optics shop.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20400843 PMCID: PMC3025659 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049510003584
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Two opposite-facing saw-tooth structures, tilted symmetrically about the beam axis, impose a parabolic thickness profile. Either piece’s spatial acceptance is at most the tooth height v, occurring when the saw-tooth pattern is long enough (>v/sinα) for the grazing incidence setting. The beam can enter from either end, leaving the operation unaffected.
Figure 2Left: dicing-cut grooves defining parallelogram island pixels. Center: detail of the local saw-tooth profile formed by two corner-adjacent pixels. Right: image of a segment within an actual 130 mm-long device.
Figure 3Profile of a 115 keV line focus at 58.5 m from the source created by a single upright lens in a 2:1 demagnification scheme measured with a 5 µm slit. The expected (unconvolved) result for the width is 17.4 µm.