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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Nanofabrication of Diffractive Soft X-ray Optics

Lindblom, Magnus January 2009 (has links)
This thesis summarizes the present status of the nanofabrication of diffractive optics, i.e. zone plates, and test objects for soft x-ray microscopy at KTH. The emphasis is on new and improved fabrication processes for nickel and germanium zone plates. A new concept in which nickel and germanium are combined in a zone plate is also presented. The main techniques used in the fabrication are electron beam lithography for the patterning, followed by plasma etching and electroplating for the structuring of the optical materials. The process for fabricating nickel zone plates has been significantly improved. The reproducibility of the electroplating step has been increased by the implementation of an in-situ rate measurement and an end-point detection method. We have also shown that pulse plating can be used to obtain zone plates with a uniform height profile. New plating mold materials have been introduced and electron-beam curing of the molds has been investigated and implemented to increase their mechanical stability so that pattern collapse in the electroplating step can be avoided. The introduction of cold development has improved the achievable resolution of the process. This has enabled the fabrication of zone plates with outermost zone widths down to 16 nm. The nickel process has also recently been adapted to fabrication of gold structures intended for test objects and hard x-ray zone plates. For the fabrication of germanium zone plates we developed a highly anisotropic plasma-etch process using Cl2 feed and sidewall passivation. Germanium zone plates have been fabricated with zone widths down to 30 nm. The diffraction efficiency is comparable to that of nickel zone plates, but the process does not involve electroplating and thus has for potential for highyield fabrication. The combination of nickel and germanium is a new fabrication concept that provides a means to achieve high diffraction efficiency even for thin nickel. The idea is to fabricate a nickel zone plate on a germanium film. The nickel zone plate itself is then used as etch mask for a highly selective CHF3- plasma etch into the germanium layer. Proof of principle experiments showed an efficiency increase of about a factor of two for nickel zone plates with a 50- nm nickel thickness. / QC 20100728
12

Tunable Focused X-rays For Patterning and Lithography

Leontowich, Adam F.G. 10 1900 (has links)
<p>Scanning transmission x-ray microscopes (STXM) focus monochromatic x-rays into an intense sub-30 nm diameter spot. Samples are then positioned at the focal plane and raster scanned through the spot while the transmitted x-rays are acquired to build up images at x-ray photon energies. In addition, x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) can be performed by recording image sequences over a photon energy range of interest. STXMs excel at characterizing thin sections of inhomogeneous soft matter with their combination of high spatial (<30 nm) and photon energy (<0.1 eV) resolution. However, the overarching theme of this thesis is to apply the intense, tightly focused spot of x-rays to induce spatially resolved chemical and physical changes, and directly pattern materials, primarily thin polymer films. The irradiated areas are then investigated using several types of microscopy (scanning transmission x-ray, atomic force, scanning electron) and XAS. The experiments cover three broad areas: i) Nanofabrication; realization of the smallest possible feature sizes, and fabrication schemes unique to focused x-rays with applications including nanofluidics. ii) Radiation chemistry and physics; investigating the mechanisms of radiation-induced processes such as bond formation/loss, morphological change, carbon contamination, and temperature increase. iii) X-ray optics; the spatial distribution of x-rays at a focal plane can be recorded in a thin polymer film and later read out using an atomic force microscope. Applications include feedback for optics fabrication and enhanced image processing, the ultimate goal being increased spatial resolution.</p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
13

Considerations in the design and operation of synchrotron radiation beamlines (including a discussion on the properties of synchrotron radiation

Neiser, Richard A. January 1985 (has links)
The X-ray optics of synchrotron radiation beamlines are considered in this paper. The characteristics of synchrotron radiation which make it the premier source of light for studies in many regions of the electromagnetic spectrum are given. A chapter is devoted to the collimating, focusing and monochromating optics of two X-ray diffraction beamlines at the National Synchrotron Light Source. The beamlines are operated by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) and the Oak Ridge National Lab (ORNL). The major optical components of these beamlines are reviewed in regards to their function and their flexibility. A detailed analysis is performed on the NRL X-ray collimating mirror. The mirror is treated as an elastically bent beam. Deflection and slope error equations are developed which relate the shape of the bent mirror to its ideal surface. Visible light diffraction patterns collected from the mirror helped to establish operating conditions which provide good collimation. When the observed patterns are wed to the theoretical calculations, estimates of the average figure error are made. Finally, the effect of a highly collimated synchrotron beam on the reproducibility of the integrated intensities from polycrystalline materials is considered. The calculations show that except for the most fine grained materials, representative intensity measurements can only be made when the sample is permitted to move. / M.S.
14

Laboratory Soft X-Ray Cryo Microscopy: Source, System and Bio Applications

Fogelqvist, Emelie January 2017 (has links)
Soft x-ray microscopes routinely perform high-resolution 3D imaging of biological cells in their near-native environment with short exposure times at synchrotron radiation facilities. Some laboratory-sized microscopes are aiming to make this imaging technique more accessible to a wider scientific community. However, these systems have been hampered by source instabilities hindering routine imaging of biological samples with short exposure times. This Thesis presents work performed on the Stockholm laboratory x-ray microscope. A novel heat control system has been implemented, improving the stability of the laser-produced plasma source. In combination with recent upgrades to the imaging system and an improved cryofixation method, the microscope now has the capability to routinely produce images with 10-second exposure time of cryofixed biological samples. This has allowed for tomographic imaging of cell autophagy and cell-cell interactions. Furthermore, a numerical 3D image formation model is presented as well as a novel reconstruction approach dealing with the limited depth of focus in x-ray microscopes. / <p>QC 20170505</p>
15

Crack Patterns in Thin Films and X-ray Optics Thermal Deformations

Kravchenko, Grygoriy A 07 November 2008 (has links)
Thin films and multilayers are widely used in many applications, ranging from X-ray optics to microelectronic devices. In service, the X-ray optics elements are exposed to the X-ray beam, which heats up the structure resulting in the thermal deformations, and consequently in distortions of the reflective surface. In addition, the excessive heating may activate interdiffusion in the multilayers coatings and result in degradation of their reflective performance and even film cracking. Therefore, analysis of the thermally-induced deformations and stresses in the X-ray optical elements is important. The presented work is organized in two major parts. The first part examines formation of the peculiar periodic crack patterns observed in the thermally loaded Mo/Si multilayers. Film stress evolution during thermal cycling of the multilayers on Si substrate is analyzed. Results of the high-speed microscopic observations of crack propagation in the annealed Mo/Si multilayers are presented. The observations provide experimental evidence of the mechanism underlying formation of the periodic crack patterns. In the second part, thermal deformations and the resulting surface curvature changes in the X-ray optics elements are analyzed. Finite element modeling is used to assess the potential to thermally control curvature in the X-ray mirrors consisting of the Mo/Si multilayers on a Si substrate. Influence of heating due to the X-ray beam irradiation on thermal deformations in the X-ray mirror bonded to a thick substrate is analyzed in-depth. The detailed consideration includes analysis of the thermal and structural mechanics simulations. Based on simulations of different model configurations, influence of structural composition on thermal distortions of the optics elements is addressed. Results of this analysis can be used to mitigate distortions of the X-ray optics caused by the X-ray beam and provide basis for further studies of thermally controlling surface curvature in the optical elements.
16

Laboratory soft x-ray microscopy and tomography

Bertilson, Michael January 2011 (has links)
Soft x-ray microscopy in the water-window (λ = 2.28 nm – 4.36 nm) is based on zone-plate optics and allows high-resolution imaging of, e.g., cells and soils in their natural or near-natural environment. Three-dimensional imaging is provided via tomographic techniques, soft x-ray cryo tomography. However, soft x-ray microscopes with such capabilities have been based on large-scale synchrotron x‑ray facilities, thereby limiting their accessibility for a wider scientific community. This Thesis describes the development of the Stockholm laboratory soft x-ray microscope to three-dimensional cryo tomography and to new optics-based contrast mechanisms. The microscope relies on a methanol or nitrogen liquid-jet laser-plasma source, normal-incidence multilayer or zone-plate condenser optics, in-house fabricated zone-plate objectives, and allows operation at two wavelengths in the water-window, λ = 2.48 nm and λ = 2.48 nm. With the implementation of a new state-of-the-art normal-incidence multilayer condenser for operation at λ = 2.48 nm and a tiltable cryogenic sample stage the microscope now allows imaging of dry, wet or cryo-fixed samples. This arrangement was used for the first demonstration of laboratory soft x-ray cryo microscopy and tomography. The performance of the microscope has been demonstrated in a number of experiments described in this Thesis, including, tomographic imaging with a resolution of 140 nm, cryo microscopy and tomography of various cells and parasites, and for studies of aqueous soils and clays. The Thesis also describes the development and implementation of single-element differential-interference and Zernike phase-contrast zone-plate objectives. The enhanced contrast provided by these optics reduce exposure times or lowers the dose in samples and are of major importance for harder x-ray microscopy. The implementation of a high-resolution 50 nm compound zone-plate objective for sub-25-nm resolution imaging is also described. All experiments are supported by extensive numerical modelling for improved understanding of partially coherent image formation and stray light in soft x-ray microscopes. The models are useful tools for studying effects of zone plate optics or optical design of the microscope on image formation and quantitative accuracy in soft x-ray tomography. / QC 20110221
17

High-Resolution Nanostructuring for Soft X-Ray Zone-Plate Optics

Reinspach, Julia January 2011 (has links)
Diffractive zone-plate lenses are widely used as optics in high-resolution x-ray microscopes. The achievable resolution in such microscopes is presently not limited by the x-ray wavelength but by limitations in zone-plate nanofabrication. Thus, for the advance of high-resolution x-ray microscopy, progress in zone-plate nanofabrication methods are needed.   This Thesis describes the development of new nanofabrication processes for improved x-ray zone-plate optics. Cold development of the electron-beam resist ZEP7000 is applied to improve the resolution of soft x-ray Ni zone plates. The influence of developer temperature on resist contrast, resolution, and pattern quality is investigated. With an optimized process, Ni zone plates with outermost zone widths down to 13 nm are demonstrated. To enhance the diffraction efficiency of Ni zone plates, the concept of Ni-Ge zone plates is introduced. The applicability of Ni-Ge zone plates is first demonstrated in a proof-of-principle experiment, and then extended to cold-developed Ni zone plates with outermost zone widths down to 13 nm. For 15-nm Ni-Ge zone plates a diffraction efficiency of 4.3% at a wavelength of 2.88 nm is achieved, which is about twice the efficiency of state-of-the-art 15-nm Ni zone plates. To further increase both resolution and diffraction efficiency of soft x-ray zone plates, a novel fabrication process for W zone plates is developed. High resolution is provided by salty development of the inorganic electron-beam resist HSQ, and cryogenic RIE in a SF6 plasma is investigated for high-aspect-ratio W structuring. We demonstrate W zone plates with 12-nm outermost zone width and a W height of 90 nm, resulting in a 30% increase in theoretical diffraction efficiency compared to 13-nm efficiency-enhanced Ni-Ge zone plates. In addition to soft x-ray zone plates, some lenses for hard x-ray free-electron-laser applications were also fabricated during this Thesis work. Fabrication processes for the materials W, diamond, and Pt were developed. We demonstrate Pt and W-diamond zone plates with 100-nm outermost zone width and respective diffraction efficiencies of 8.2% and 14.5% at a photon energy of 8 keV. / QC 20111114
18

Ein Verfahren zur Herstellung zweidimensionaler Röntgenwellenleiter / Nanostructured X-ray waveguides for holographic imaging

Neubauer, Henrike 18 July 2012 (has links)
Eine grundlegende Schwierigkeit in der Röntgenoptik liegt in der Bereitstellung geeigneter Optiken. So ist aufgrund der schwachen Wechselwirkung der Röntgenstrahlung mit Materie der Einsatz brechender Optiken nicht sinnvoll, und es wird auf alternative Konzepte wie Röntgenwellenleiter zurückgegriffen. Röntgenwellenleiter sind nicht-dispersive strahlführende Optiken, welche die Kohärenz der Röntgenstrahlung filtern und als quasi-Punktquellen fungieren. Hierbei wird der Röntgenstrahl in einer oder zwei Dimensionen räumlich beschränkt, wobei der Wellenlängenbereich der Röntgenstrahlung eine Abmessung im sub-100 nm-Bereich erfordert. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein Verfahren etabliert, mit welchem die Herstellung von Wellenleiterkanälen im sub-50 nm-Bereich in Silizium gelingt. Die Prozessierung basiert hierbei auf einem Schema aus elektronenstrahllithographischer Belichtung, Reaktivem Ionenätzen und Wafer bonding. Das Verfahren ist variabel in Bezug auf verschiedene Wellenleitergeometrien, beispielsweise gekreuzte Wellenleiter und Kanalwellenleiter, ist auf alternative Materialien übertragbar, und erlaubt die Strahlführung auf in einer Dimension gekrümmten Pfaden. Die im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit hergestellten Wellenleiter wurden erfolgreich an verschiedenen Synchrotron-Messplätzen eingesetzt und ihre Fernfelder charakterisiert, und der kohärente Wellenleiterstrahl wurde in der Röntgenmikroskopie und der holographischen Bildgebung eingesetzt. Es finden sich sowohl für die Quellgröße der Wellenleiter als auch für die Auflösung in der Bildgebung Werte im sub-50 nm-Bereich.
19

Interférométrie X à réseaux pour l'imagerie et l'analyse de front d'ondes au synchrotron / Synchrotron X-ray grating interferometry for imaging and wavefront sensing

Zanette, Irène 16 December 2011 (has links)
Le sujet de cette thèse est l'interférométrie X à réseaux: une technique d’imagerie développée pour la première fois il y a quelques années et qui donne des images de phase et de diffusion (small angle X-ray scattering) de haute sensibilité. Cette technique a un potentiel considérable pour la visualisation du structures qui absorbent faiblement les rayons X, et pour la détection de détails plus petits que la résolution du détecteur, par exemple les fissures et les fibres. Des structures de ce type ne peuvent pas être visualisées avec l’imagerie conventionnelle à rayons X en absorption. Dans le cadre des travaux sur cette thèse, un interféromètre à réseau à rayons X pour radiographie et tomographie multimodale a été installé à la ligne de lumière ID19 de l‘European Synchrotron Radiation Facility à Grenoble, France. L’excellente performance de cet instrument a été démontrée sur une grande variété d'échantillons de tissus biologiques mous, sur des échantillons paléontologiques, et sur des tissus osseux. Une autre partie des ce travail porte sur des améliorations de la technique d’imagerie elle-même. La première des ces améliorations consiste en un développement de méthodes avancées pour la tomographie avec réseaux. Ces méthodes peuvent réduire considérablement la dose livrée à l’échantillon durant les mesures nécessaires pour la reconstruction tomographique tout en préservant la qualité d’image. Un autre résultat majeur dans le cadre de ce travail est la conception, la mise en oeuvre et la démonstration d’un interféromètre à réseau à deux dimensions (2D). Cet appareil utilise des réseaux bidimentionnels au lieu de réseaux linéaires. L’interféromètre 2D produit des cartes d'angles de réfraction et des images de type champ sombre dans plusieurs directions du plan d’image et améliore considérablement la qualité des radiographies à réseau. Le champ d’application de l’interféromètre 2D n’est pas limité à l'imagerie par rayons X, puisque le nouveau dispositif peut aussi être particulièrement utile pour la caractérisation de composantes optiques de haute précision, tel que démontré par des expériences de métrologie à la longueur d'onde d'utilisationsur des lentilles réfractives pour rayons X. / The subject of this thesis is X-ray grating interferometry: an imaging technique first demonstrated a few years ago, which yields high-sensitivity phase and dark-field (small angle X-ray scattering) images of the investigated specimen. It bears tremendous potential for the visualization of low-absorbing features, and for the detection of details smaller than the resolution of the imaging system, such as cracks and fibers. Structures of this type cannot be visualized with conventional absorption X-ray imaging. As a part of this thesis work, an X-ray grating interferometer for multimodal radiography and tomography was installed at the beamline ID19 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France. The excellent performance of this instrument has been demonstrated on a large variety of soft-tissue biological samples, on paleontological specimens, and on osseous tissues. Another part of the present work concerns improvements of the imaging technique itself. The first of these improvements consists in the development of advanced schemes for grating-based tomography. These schemes can substantially reduce the dose delivered to the sample during a grating-based tomography scan, while preserving the image quality. Another major achievement of this thesis is the design, implementation and demonstration of a two-dimensional (2D) grating interferometer. This device uses gratings structured in two dimensions rather than line gratings. The 2D interferometer gives refraction angle and dark-field signals in multiple directions of the image plane and significantly improves the quality of the grating-based radiographies. The application range of the 2D interferometer is not restricted to X-ray imaging; the new device may also be particularly useful for high-precision optics characterization, as is shown by in-situ at-wavelength investigations of X-ray refractive lenses.
20

Jet and coat of adaptive sustainable thin films

Singhal, Shrawan 13 November 2013 (has links)
Deposition of nanoscale thickness films is ubiquitous in micro- and nano-scale device manufacturing. Current techniques such as spin-coating and chemical vapor deposition are designed to create only uniform thin films, and can be wasteful in material consumption. They lack the ability to adaptively prescribe desired film thickness profiles. This dissertation presents a novel inkjet-based zero-waste polymer deposition process referred to as Jet and Coat of Adaptive Sustainable Thin Films or J-CAST. The core of this process is built on an experimentally validated multi-scale fluid evolution model, based on extensions of lubrication theory. This model involves a nano-scale fluid film sandwiched between two flat plates: a compliant superstrate and a rigid substrate, with spatial topography on both surfaces. Accounting for the flexural elasticity of the compliant superstrate, and describing the temporal evolution of the fluid film in the presence of different boundary conditions reveals that instead of seeking process equilibrium, non-equilibrium transients should be exploited to guide film deposition. This forms the first core concept behind the process. This concept also enables robust full-wafer processes for creation of uniform films as well as nanoscale films with prescribed variation of thickness at mm-scale spatial wavelengths. The use of inkjets enables zero-waste adaptive material deposition with the preferred drop volumes and locations obtained from an inverse optimization formulation. This forms the second core concept behind the process. The optimization is based on the prescribed film thickness profile and typically involves >100,000 integer parameters. Using simplifying approximations for the same, three specific applications have been discussed - gradient surfaces in combinatorial materials science and research, elliptical profiles with ~10km radius of curvature for X-ray nanoscopy applications and polishing of starting wafer surfaces for mitigation of existing nanotopography. In addition, the potential of extending the demonstrated process to high throughput roll-roll systems has also been mentioned by modifying the model to incorporate the compliance of the substrate along with that of the superstrate. / text

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