May 16, 2023

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Apochromatic X-ray focusing

Such 3D printed microstructure was combined with a Fresnel zone plate to realize the apochromatic X-ray optics. Credit: Umut T. Sanli and Joan Vila-Comamala from Paul Scherrer Institute
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Such 3D printed microstructure was combined with a Fresnel zone plate to realize the apochromatic X-ray optics. Credit: Umut T. Sanli and Joan Vila-Comamala from Paul Scherrer Institute

A team of scientists from the Paul Scherrer Institut, the University of Basel and DESY have demonstrated the first-ever realization of apochromatic X-ray focusing using a tailored combination of a refractive lens and a Fresnel zone plate. This innovative approach enables the correction of the chromatic aberration suffered by both refractive and diffractive lenses over a wide range of X-ray energies. This groundbreaking development in X-ray optics has just been published in Light: Science & Applications.

Diffractive and refractive lenses are widely used in X-ray analysis and high-resolution X-ray microscopy with many scientific applications in , energy sciences and biology.

Nevertheless, both types of X-ray optics suffer from a strong chromatic aberration, meaning that they focus different X-ray energies/wavelengths at different distances along the optical axis. As a result, many high-resolution X-ray analysis techniques can only be implemented with monochromatic X-ray beams, meaning that in many cases a large portion of the X-ray intensity is sacrificed.

The apochromatic X-ray optic consisted of two independent optical elements separated by a distance: a divergent refractive X-ray produced by state-of-the-art 3D printing with submicrometer accuracy and a Fresnel zone plate fabricated by and gold electroplating. These elements were produced in-house using the cleanrooms and nanofabrication facilities at Paul Scherrer Institut.

The apochromatic X-ray optics was characterized by scanning transmission X-ray microscopy and ptychographic X-ray imaging. Sub-micrometer apochromatic focusing was achieved for an X-ray energy range from 7 to 12 keV. The X-ray measurements were carried out at beamline P06 at PETRA III, DESY (Hamburg, Germany).

In the future, apochromatic X-ray lenses could emerge as a cost-effective and compact alternative to mirror-based systems, with the further advantage of being on-axis imaging optics. They are likely to play an increasingly important role in the field of X-ray imaging and microscopy and for their scientific applications in both accelerator-based and laboratory X-ray sources.

More information: Umut T. Sanli et al, Apochromatic X-ray focusing, Light: Science & Applications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41377-023-01157-8

Journal information: Light: Science & Applications

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