Abstract
The paper considers the possibility of using the diamond-silicon carbide composite Skeleton® with a technological coating of polycrystalline silicon as a substrate for X-ray mirrors used with powerful synchrotron radiation sources (third+ and fourth generation). Samples were studied after polishing to provide the following surface parameters: root-mean-square flatness ≃ 50 nm, micro-roughness on the frame 2 µm × 2 µm σ ≃ 0.15 nm. The heat capacity, thermal conductivity and coefficient of linear thermal expansion were investigated. For comparison, a monocrystalline silicon sample was studied under the same conditions using the same methods. The value of the coefficient of linear thermal expansion turned out to be higher than that of monocrystalline silicon and amounted to 4.3 × 10−6 K−1, and the values of thermal conductivity (5.0 W cm−1 K−1) and heat capacity (1.2 J K−1 g−1) also exceeded the values for Si. Thermally induced deformations of both Skeleton® and monocrystalline silicon samples under irradiation with a CO2 laser beam have also been experimentally studied. Taking into account the obtained thermophysical constants, the calculation of thermally induced deformation under irradiation with hard (20 keV) X-rays showed almost three times less deformation of the Skeleton® sample than of the monocrystalline silicon sample.
Funder
Russian Science Foundation
State program of IPM RAS
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
Reference24 articles.
1. Short-period multilayer X-ray mirrors
2. Next-generation materials for future synchrotron and free-electron laser sources
3. Belure, A. R., Biswas, A. K., Raghunathan, D., Bhartiya, R. S., Rai, S. K., Pawade, R. S., Kamath, M. P. & Benerji, N. S. (2019). International Conference on Precision, Meso, Micro and Nano Engineering (COPEN2019), 12-14 December 2019, Indore, India.
4. Development of super-smooth flat silicon mirror substrates using bowl-feed chemical-mechanical polishing