Correction of the X-ray wavefront from compound refractive lenses using 3D printed refractive structures.

J Synchrotron Radiat

Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot, Oxon OX11 0DE, United Kingdom.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new type of refractive phase corrector optics has been developed to correct manufacturing errors in X-ray optical elements, using a combination of techniques including 3D printing and wavefront measurements.*
  • The corrector, made from a polymer and manufactured using advanced techniques, significantly reduced the wavefront error of X-ray lenses during testing, improving the quality of the focused beam.*
  • Further research aims to address residual errors related to non-spherical aberrations by developing a more sophisticated corrector with varying thickness to enhance the focusing capabilities of X-ray lenses at high-performance beamlines.*

Article Abstract

A refractive phase corrector optics is proposed for the compensation of fabrication error of X-ray optical elements. Here, at-wavelength wavefront measurements of the focused X-ray beam by knife-edge imaging technique, the design of a three-dimensional corrector plate, its fabrication by 3D printing, and use of a corrector to compensate for X-ray lens figure errors are presented. A rotationally invariant corrector was manufactured in the polymer IP-S using additive manufacturing based on the two-photon polymerization technique. The fabricated corrector was characterized at the B16 Test beamline, Diamond Light Source, UK, showing a reduction in r.m.s. wavefront error of a Be compound refractive Lens (CRL) by a factor of six. The r.m.s. wavefront error is a figure of merit for the wavefront quality but, for X-ray lenses, with significant X-ray absorption, a form of the r.m.s. error with weighting proportional to the transmitted X-ray intensity has been proposed. The knife-edge imaging wavefront-sensing technique was adapted to measure rotationally variant wavefront errors from two different sets of Be CRL consisting of 98 and 24 lenses. The optical aberrations were then quantified using a Zernike polynomial expansion of the 2D wavefront error. The compensation by a rotationally invariant corrector plate was partial as the Be CRL wavefront error distribution was found to vary with polar angle indicating the presence of non-spherical aberration terms. A wavefront correction plate with rotationally anisotropic thickness is proposed to compensate for anisotropy in order to achieve good focusing by CRLs at beamlines operating at diffraction-limited storage rings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642970PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577520011765DOI Listing

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