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In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region

Carbon-free chromium-coated optics are ideal in the carbon K-edge region (280–330 eV) because the reflectivity of first-order light is larger than that of gold-coated optics while the second-order harmonics (560–660 eV) are significantly suppressed by chromium L-edge and oxygen K-edge absorption. He...

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Autores principales: Toyoshima, Akio, Kikuchi, Takashi, Tanaka, Hirokazu, Mase, Kazuhiko, Amemiya, Kenta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4629864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26524299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577515015040
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author Toyoshima, Akio
Kikuchi, Takashi
Tanaka, Hirokazu
Mase, Kazuhiko
Amemiya, Kenta
author_facet Toyoshima, Akio
Kikuchi, Takashi
Tanaka, Hirokazu
Mase, Kazuhiko
Amemiya, Kenta
author_sort Toyoshima, Akio
collection PubMed
description Carbon-free chromium-coated optics are ideal in the carbon K-edge region (280–330 eV) because the reflectivity of first-order light is larger than that of gold-coated optics while the second-order harmonics (560–660 eV) are significantly suppressed by chromium L-edge and oxygen K-edge absorption. Here, chromium-, gold- and nickel-coated mirrors have been adopted in the vacuum ultraviolet and soft X-ray branch beamline BL-13B at the Photon Factory in Tsukuba, Japan. Carbon contamination on the chromium-coated mirror was almost completely removed by exposure to oxygen at a pressure of 8 × 10(−2) Pa for 1 h under irradiation of non-monochromated synchrotron radiation. The pressure in the chamber recovered to the order of 10(−7) Pa within a few hours. The reflectivity of the chromium-coated mirror of the second-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region (560–660 eV) was found to be a factor of 0.1–0.48 smaller than that of the gold-coated mirror.
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spelling pubmed-46298642015-11-20 In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region Toyoshima, Akio Kikuchi, Takashi Tanaka, Hirokazu Mase, Kazuhiko Amemiya, Kenta J Synchrotron Radiat Research Papers Carbon-free chromium-coated optics are ideal in the carbon K-edge region (280–330 eV) because the reflectivity of first-order light is larger than that of gold-coated optics while the second-order harmonics (560–660 eV) are significantly suppressed by chromium L-edge and oxygen K-edge absorption. Here, chromium-, gold- and nickel-coated mirrors have been adopted in the vacuum ultraviolet and soft X-ray branch beamline BL-13B at the Photon Factory in Tsukuba, Japan. Carbon contamination on the chromium-coated mirror was almost completely removed by exposure to oxygen at a pressure of 8 × 10(−2) Pa for 1 h under irradiation of non-monochromated synchrotron radiation. The pressure in the chamber recovered to the order of 10(−7) Pa within a few hours. The reflectivity of the chromium-coated mirror of the second-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region (560–660 eV) was found to be a factor of 0.1–0.48 smaller than that of the gold-coated mirror. International Union of Crystallography 2015-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4629864/ /pubmed/26524299 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577515015040 Text en © Akio Toyoshima et al. 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Toyoshima, Akio
Kikuchi, Takashi
Tanaka, Hirokazu
Mase, Kazuhiko
Amemiya, Kenta
In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title_full In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title_fullStr In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title_full_unstemmed In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title_short In situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon K-edge region
title_sort in situ removal of carbon contamination from a chromium-coated mirror: ideal optics to suppress higher-order harmonics in the carbon k-edge region
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4629864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26524299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577515015040
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