New record set for smallest X-ray nano-spot
ARGONNE, Ill. (March 31, 2006) An award-winning device developed at the
U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory has set a world's
record for tiny spot size with a hard X-ray beam.
The device is called a Multilayer Laue Lens. The wafer from which the device
was made won a 2005 R&D
100 award, given to the world's top 100 scientific
and technological innovations. The enhancements to the device have now increased
its ability to focus the X-rays with an energy level of 19.5 keV to 30 nanometers.
For comparison, the period at the end of this sentence is approximately one
million nanometers in diameter.
The lens just like the lens of a camera allows precise focusing of the
X-ray light.Using the lens, researchers will be able to visualize three-dimensional
electronic circuit boards to find circuit errors, or map impurities in biological
or environmental samples at the nanometer scale. They can also analyze samples
inside high-pressure or high-temperature cells, since hard X-rays, unlike soft
X-rays, are able to penetrate container walls.
Other examples of uses of the new lens include development of smaller, better-performing
and more reliable computers and telecommunications equipment; improving materials
for energy efficient lighting, motors, fuel cells and solar energy production;
production of lighter, sturdier, safer transportation vehicles through advanced
materials with tailored properties; imaging cell division and tumor growth,
providing a new mechanism for the early detection of cancer; and faster, more
sensitive detection of hazards in local and global environments.
The researchers developed the record-setting lens by depositing 728 layers
of material, one layer at a time, on a silicon substrate wafer. The thickness
of the layer stack, when completed, was 12.4 microns. The wafer is then sectioned
into bars that are used to make the lenses for the X-ray.
The work is published in today's edition of Physical
Review Letters.
The accomplishment here is two-fold, said lead author Hyon Chol Kang. The
first is to grow that many layers without peeling, and, second, to cut and
polish a bar without damaging the lens. We're continuing the development, and
calculations for an idealized structure indicate that a focus of one nanometer
is not prohibited by any known physics. The great challenge will be to grow
the idealized structure.
The optical design is akin to a linear Fresnel lens conventionally made by
photolithography, but with the crucial difference that the diffraction structure
is formed from many individually sputtered layers. High quality sputtered layers
can be grown with thicknesses of 1 nm, and it is this control which makes the
multilayer lens possible.
The new device is being used at the Advanced
Photon Source at Argonne, which
produces the most brilliant X-rays in the Western Hemisphere. It will also
be particularly useful as the Center for Nanoscale
Materials at Argonne becomes
operational later this year.
Researchers Al Macrander, Macrander and Raymond Conley, all part of the Advanced
Photon Source X-ray Science Division optics
fabrication and metrology group, developed the lens wafers which won the 2005
R&D 100
award. They are joined by Stefan Vogt, also of the X-ray
Science Division;
Kang and Brian Stephenson of the Materials
Science Division at Argonne, and Jorg Maser of the X-ray Science Division
and Center for Nanoscale Materials at
Argonne. The work is especially meaningful for Maser, who predicted the theoretical
ability of an X-ray lens to focus at this small size in his doctoral dissertation
in 1994.
Argonne National Laboratory brings
the world's brightest scientists and engineers together to find exciting and
creative new solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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