| Literature DB >> 26289266 |
T S Toellner1, J Collins1, K Goetze1, M Y Hu1, C Preissner1, E Trakhtenberg1, L Yan1.
Abstract
A high-resolution silicon monochromator suitable for 21.541 keV synchrotron radiation is presented that produces a bandwidth of 0.27 meV. The operating energy corresponds to a nuclear transition in (151)Eu. The first-of-its-kind, fully cryogenic design achieves an energy-alignment stability of 0.017 meV r.m.s. per day, or a 100-fold improvement over other meV-monochromators, and can tolerate higher X-ray power loads than room-temperature designs of comparable resolution. This offers the potential for significantly more accurate measurements of lattice excitation energies using nuclear resonant vibrational spectroscopy if combined with accurate energy calibration using, for example, high-speed Doppler shifting. The design of the monochromator along with its performance and impact on transmitted beam properties are presented.Entities:
Keywords: cryostat; europium; high energy-resolution; monochromator; nuclear resonance
Year: 2015 PMID: 26289266 PMCID: PMC4542453 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577515012230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Drawing of the cryo-platform including the gas-cooled chamber (top) that houses the HRM, and positioners for aligning the HRM to the X-ray beam (bottom). The outer vacuum vessel is not shown.
Figure 2Schematic of the crystal arrangement for the HRM including a beryllium compound refractive lens that is placed 30 m upstream. Numbers refer to crystal reflections and are referenced in the text.
Figure 3Calculated bare-optic transmission function of HRM for 21.541 keV σ-polarized photons. The peak transmission is 43%, and the contour is drawn at 50% of this value.
Figure 4Photograph of the monolithic stage using flexures for energy positioning. Both axes are counter-rotated to effect a controlled rotation of all four crystals with a single actuation. The centrally located cylindrical component is the coarse actuator (PI N-215) with its vertical drive shaft hidden from view.
Figure 5Photograph of the HRM. Silicon crystals (a), and ionization chambers (b) are marked. The largest dimension is approximately 38 cm.
Figure 6Resolution function of the monochromator measured at 21.541 keV using nuclear resonant scattering from 151EuS. The resolution function is measured under normal operating conditions with a cooling-gas flow rate of 1.3 l s−1 (solid circles) and has a FWHM of 0.27 meV. The solid line is a shape function based upon two-beam dynamical diffraction.
Figure 7Energy read-back values during an energy-stepped scan of 50 µeV intervals. Energy positions are reached in approximately 50 ms.