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RADIATION
ISSN: 1600-5775

X-ray wideband in-line holography using a zone plate

aBSRF, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100039, People's Republic of China
*Correspondence e-mail: cuimq@bepc3.ihep.ac.cn

(Received 4 August 1997; accepted 1 December 1997)

X-ray wideband in-line holography, a new X-ray holography geometry using a zone plate, is proposed. The temporal coherence requirement in this geometry can be very low.

1. Introduction

Currently available methods of soft X-ray holography such as in-line holography and Fourier transform holography (Jacobsen et al., 1990[Jacobsen, C., Howells, M., Kirz, J. & Rothman, S. (1990). J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, 7(10), 1847-1861.]; McNulty et al., 1992[McNulty, I., Kirz, J., Jacobsen, C., Anderson, E. H., Howells, M. R. & Kern, D. P. (1992). Science, 256, 1009-1012.]) have a resolution of tens of nanometers. A monochromaticity (λ/Δλ) of several hundred is required. X-ray wideband in-line holography (Zhu, 1995[Zhu, P. P. (1995). PhD thesis. Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.]; Chen et al., 1997[Chen, J. W., Zhu, P., Xiao, T. Q., Chen, M. & Xu, Z. Z. (1997). Proc. SPIE, 3154, 245-249.]), a new geometry of soft X-ray holography in which the requirement for temporal coherence can be very low, is reported here.

2. X-ray wideband in-line holography

Wideband in-line X-ray holography geometry is constructed by inserting a microzone plate into the in-line holography geometry (Gabor, 1948[Gabor, D. (1948). Nature (London), 161, 777-778.]), as shown in Fig. 1[link]. The first diffraction order from the focus of the zone plate serves as the reference wave, and the zeroth order illuminates the specimen downstream from the focus to produce the object wave. In order to illuminate the specimen, the first zone in the centre of the zone plate is transparent. An order-sorting aperture (OSA) in the focal plane is used to select the first order and zeroth order.

[Figure 1]
Figure 1
Schematic diagram of X-ray wideband in-line holography.

A spatially coherent X-ray beam is required to illuminate the zone plate, and according to Fourier analysis

[A\varphi = AD/Z_{a} \le \lambda/2, \eqno (1)]

where A is the diameter of the aperture, D is the diameter of the zone plate, φ is the angle which D subtends at the aperture, Za is the distance between the aperture and the zone plate and λ is the effective wavelength. In this geometry

[Z_{a} \ge 2AD/\lambda \gg Z_{f}\ \gt\ Z_{o}, \eqno (2)]

where Zo is the distance from the specimen to the hologram and Zf is the distance from the focal point to the hologram. All aperture-to-zone-plate X-ray paths can be regarded to be approximately Za.

For simplicity, only the path difference between the reference and the object point on the axis will be calculated. The reference path Lr from the aperture to a point on the hologram is

[\eqalignno {L_{r} & = Z_{a} + [(Z_{f} + f)/Z_{f}] (Z^{2}_{f} + R^{2})^{1/2} \cr & = Z_{a} + (Z_{f} + f) [1+(R^{2}/2Z^{2}_{f}) - (R^{4}/8Z^{4}_{f})], & (3)}]

where R is the radius of the point and f is the focal length. The object path Lo from the aperture to the same point is given by

[\eqalignno {L_{o} & = Z_{a} + f +(Z_{f}-Z_{o}) + (Z^{2}_{o} + R^{2})^{1/2} \cr & = Z_{a} +Z_{f} + f + (R^{2} / 2z^{2}_{o}) - (R^{4} / 8Z^{4}_{o}). & (4)}]

The path difference between the reference and the object is given by

[\eqalignno {\Delta L & = \big| L_{r}-L_{o} \big| \cr & = \ \biggr|[Z_{o}(Z_{f}+f)-Z^{2}_{f}]{{R^{2}} \over {2Z_{o}Z^{2}_{f}}} - [Z^{3}_{o}(Z_{f}+f)-Z^{4}_{f}]{{R^{4}} \over {8Z^{3}_{o}Z^{4}_{f}}} \biggr|. &(5)}]

If

[Z_{o}(Z_{f}+f) = Z^{2}_{f}, \eqno (6)]

then

[\eqalignno {\Delta L & = (Z^{2}_{f} - Z^{2}_{o})R^{4}/8Z^{3}_{o}Z^{2}_{f} \cr & = (Z_{f} + Z_{o})fR^{4}/8Z^{3}_{o}Z^{2}_{f} \cr &\ \lt \ R^{4}/4Z^{3}_{o}. &(7)}]

Since the path difference ΔL should be smaller than the coherence length, i.e.

[\Delta L \le \lambda^{2}/\Delta\lambda, \eqno (8)]

and

[R_{{\rm max}}/Z_{o} \le \lambda / \delta, \eqno (9)]

where δ is the transverse resolution, the effective bandwidth is given by

[\lambda/\Delta \lambda \ge Z_{o}\lambda^{3}/4\delta^{4}. \eqno (10)]

For example, when δ = 60 nm, λ = 3 nm and Zo = 4 mm (implying Zf = 5 mm and f = 1.25 mm), substituting these values and (9) into (7) and (10) gives ΔL < 6 nm and λ/Δλ ≥ 2. According to these values, the coherence requirement of X-ray in-line holography is very low.

The principle behind this kind of holography is figuratively shown in Fig. 2[link]. Although equiphase surfaces of the reference wave from the focus of the zone plate are spherical, rays emerging simultaneously from the aperture do not reach the focus at the same time. This means that the equitime surfaces are not spherical after the zone plate. The equiphase surfaces after the zone plate are constructed from different equiphase surfaces before the zone plate, so the equiphase surfaces and the equitime surfaces necessarily separate from each other. Diverging equiphase spheres are transformed into converging equiphase spheres by the process of diffraction by the zone plate, but diverging equitime spheres are changed into aspherical surfaces. In Fig. 2[link], the solid lines represent the equitime surfaces which are the same as the equiphase surfaces, and the dashed lines represent the equitime surfaces which are different from the equiphase surfaces. If the condition (6) is satisfied, the path difference between the reference and the object can be very small. The critical point is that path differences between rays from different wave zones of the zone plate can be used to compensate for path differences between the reference and the object.

[Figure 2]
Figure 2
Schematic diagram of the principle of X-ray wideband in-line holography.

The results in (7) and (10) can also be obtained in a different but equivalent way, by decomposing the incident X-ray beam into a sum of contributions from different frequency components with a dispersion of focal positions. The OSA only stops non-axial zeroth-order and high-order X-rays, so its internal diameter can be large enough to allow wideband X-rays to pass through. We can easily come to the conclusion that if the condition (6) is satisfied, the different monochromatic interference patterns will remain approximately in step.

Further calculations show that the path difference for an object point off the axis is

[\eqalignno {\Delta L \, \lt \, |(\lambda/\delta)^{4}(Z_{o}/4) \pm Rr/Z_{o}| & \simeq | (\lambda /\delta)^{4}(Z_{o} /4) \pm \lambda r / \delta| \cr & \ \lt \ (\lambda / \delta)^{4}(Z_{o} / 4) + \lambda r / \delta, & (11)}]

where r is the radius of the object point. If the radius r is 2 µm, then substituting the values of δ, λ and Zo used previously into (11) gives ΔL ≤ 0.1 µm.

The characteristic quasi-equal-path of this kind of holography could be used to obtain information on the two-dimensional spatial coherence of an X-ray beam.

3. Conclusions

A new geometry for X-ray wideband holography is proposed in this paper. The path differences between rays diffracted by the zone plate from different wave zones can be used to compensate for the path differences between the reference and the object, making the requirement for temporal coherence of the X-ray beam very low.

References

First citationChen, J. W., Zhu, P., Xiao, T. Q., Chen, M. & Xu, Z. Z. (1997). Proc. SPIE, 3154, 245–249.  CrossRef
First citationGabor, D. (1948). Nature (London), 161, 777–778.  CrossRef PubMed CAS Web of Science
First citationJacobsen, C., Howells, M., Kirz, J. & Rothman, S. (1990). J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, 7(10), 1847–1861.  CrossRef Web of Science
First citationMcNulty, I., Kirz, J., Jacobsen, C., Anderson, E. H., Howells, M. R. & Kern, D. P. (1992). Science, 256, 1009–1012.  CrossRef PubMed CAS Web of Science
First citationZhu, P. P. (1995). PhD thesis. Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.

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Journal logoJOURNAL OF
SYNCHROTRON
RADIATION
ISSN: 1600-5775
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