Literature DB >> 21832330

HPHT growth and x-ray characterization of high-quality type IIa diamond.

R C Burns1, A I Chumakov, S H Connell, D Dube, H P Godfried, J O Hansen, J Härtwig, J Hoszowska, F Masiello, L Mkhonza, M Rebak, A Rommevaux, R Setshedi, P Van Vaerenbergh.   

Abstract

The trend in synchrotron radiation (x-rays) is towards higher brilliance. This may lead to a very high power density, of the order of hundreds of watts per square millimetre at the x-ray optical elements. These elements are, typically, windows, polarizers, filters and monochromators. The preferred material for Bragg diffracting optical elements at present is silicon, which can be grown to a very high crystal perfection and workable size as well as rather easily processed to the required surface quality. This allows x-ray optical elements to be built with a sufficient degree of lattice perfection and crystal processing that they may preserve transversal coherence in the x-ray beam. This is important for the new techniques which include phase-sensitive imaging experiments like holo-tomography, x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy, coherent diffraction imaging and nanofocusing. Diamond has a lower absorption coefficient than silicon, a better thermal conductivity and lower thermal expansion coefficient which would make it the preferred material if the crystal perfection (bulk and surface) could be improved. Synthetic HPHT-grown (high pressure, high temperature) type Ib material can readily be produced in the necessary sizes of 4-8 mm square and with a nitrogen content of typically a few hundred parts per million. This material has applications in the less demanding roles such as phase plates: however, in a coherence-preserving beamline, where all elements must be of the same high quality, its quality is far from sufficient. Advances in HPHT synthesis methods have allowed the growth of type IIa diamond crystals of the same size as type Ib, but with substantially lower nitrogen content. Characterization of this high purity type IIa material has been carried out with the result that the crystalline (bulk) perfection of some of the HPHT-grown materials is approaching the quality required for the more demanding applications such as imaging applications and imaging applications with coherence preservation. The targets for further development of the type IIa diamond are size, crystal perfection, as measured by the techniques of white beam and monochromatic x-ray diffraction imaging (historically called x-ray topography), and also surface quality. Diamond plates extracted from the cubic growth sector furthest from the seed of the new low strain material produces no measurable broadening of the x-ray rocking curve width. One measures essentially the crystal reflectivity as defined by the intrinsic reflectivity curve (Darwin curve) width of a perfect crystal. In these cases the more sensitive technique of plane wave topography has been used to establish a local upper limit of the strain at the level of an 'effective misorientation' of 10(-7) rad.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 21832330     DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/21/36/364224

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Condens Matter        ISSN: 0953-8984            Impact factor:   2.333


  5 in total

1.  Demonstration of simultaneous experiments using thin crystal multiplexing at the Linac Coherent Light Source.

Authors:  Y Feng; R Alonso-Mori; T R M Barends; V D Blank; S Botha; M Chollet; D S Damiani; R B Doak; J M Glownia; J M Koglin; H T Lemke; M Messerschmidt; K Nass; S Nelson; I Schlichting; R L Shoeman; Yu V Shvyd'ko; M Sikorski; S Song; S Stoupin; S Terentyev; G J Williams; D Zhu; A Robert; S Boutet
Journal:  J Synchrotron Radiat       Date:  2015-04-10       Impact factor: 2.616

2.  Optical Properties of Bulk Single-Crystal Diamonds at 80-1200 K by Vibrational Spectroscopic Methods.

Authors:  Zitao Shi; Qilong Yuan; Yuezhong Wang; Kazuhito Nishimura; Guojian Yang; Bingxue Zhang; Nan Jiang; He Li
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-03       Impact factor: 3.623

3.  Optics for coherent X-ray applications.

Authors:  Makina Yabashi; Kensuke Tono; Hidekazu Mimura; Satoshi Matsuyama; Kazuto Yamauchi; Takashi Tanaka; Hitoshi Tanaka; Kenji Tamasaku; Haruhiko Ohashi; Shunji Goto; Tetsuya Ishikawa
Journal:  J Synchrotron Radiat       Date:  2014-08-27       Impact factor: 2.616

4.  All-diamond optical assemblies for a beam-multiplexing X-ray monochromator at the Linac Coherent Light Source.

Authors:  S Stoupin; S A Terentyev; V D Blank; Yu V Shvyd'ko; K Goetze; L Assoufid; S N Polyakov; M S Kuznetsov; N V Kornilov; J Katsoudas; R Alonso-Mori; M Chollet; Y Feng; J M Glownia; H Lemke; A Robert; M Sikorski; S Song; D Zhu
Journal:  J Appl Crystallogr       Date:  2014-08-01       Impact factor: 3.304

5.  Small Bragg-plane slope errors revealed in synthetic diamond crystals.

Authors:  Paresh Pradhan; Michael Wojcik; Xianrong Huang; Elina Kasman; Lahsen Assoufid; Jayson Anton; Deming Shu; Sergey Terentyev; Vladimir Blank; Kwang Je Kim; Yuri Shvyd'ko
Journal:  J Synchrotron Radiat       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 2.616

  5 in total

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