research papers
Simultaneous measurement of X-ray specular reflection and off-specular diffuse scattering from liquid surfaces using a two-dimensional pixel array detector: the liquid-interface reflectometer of BL37XU at SPring-8
aResearch Organization of Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University, Shiga, Japan, bJapan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute, Hyogo, Japan, and cDepartment of Photonics, Ritsumeikan University, Shiga, Japan
*Correspondence e-mail: y-yano@fc.ritsumei.ac.jp
An X-ray reflectometer for simultaneous measurement of specular and off-specular reflection of liquid surfaces is described. The reflectometer, equipped with a two-dimensional single X-ray photon-counting pixel array detector obtained the full range of X-ray specular and off-specular reflections in an extremely short time (1 s). Both the specular and off-specular reflection of water exhibited good agreement with the predicted capillary-wave theory within the appropriate instrumental resolution. The approach is also demonstrated on an aqueous solution of 1-dodecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride. The monolayer in which the dodecyl chain faces upwards and the Cl− anion locates next to the imidazolium ring formed on the water surface was found to be laterally homogeneous. The use of a pixel array detector will be particularly powerful for in situ measurements to investigate both out-of-plane and in-plane structures simultaneously, not only for liquid surfaces but also for other thin films.
Keywords: X-ray reflectivity; off-specular diffuse scattering; PILATUS; air/water interface; ionic liquids.
1. Introduction
Over the past 20 years, X-ray reflectivity measurements using synchrotron X-ray sources have been one of the most powerful tools for investigating the surface phenomena of liquids (Daillant & Gibaud, 1999; Tolan, 1999). Such techniques allow the density profile to be measured along the surface normal on a sub-angstrom spatial resolution. By carefully examining diffuse scattering in the vicinity of specular reflection peaks, structural information parallel to the surface can also be obtained.
The surface morphology of liquid surfaces is governed by thermally excited capillary waves with molecular-size amplitudes and micrometer-order wavelengths (Buff et al., 1965). Sinha et al. have theoretically demonstrated that diffuse scattering from liquid surfaces diverges algebraically at the specular reflection angle, creating large tails that extend into the surrounding off-specular region (Sinha et al., 1988). This theoretical prediction has been verified experimentally for simple molecular liquids (Braslau et al., 1988; Schwartz et al., 1990; Sanyal et al., 1991; Pershan, 2000; Shpyrko et al., 2004) and liquid metals (Pershan, 2000; Shpyrko et al., 2003, 2004; Tostmann et al., 1999). In contrast, scattering that exceeds the predicted capillary contribution has been observed for Langmuir monolayers on a water surface, and provides lateral structural information on the monolayers (Li et al., 1995; Fukuto et al., 1998, 1999, 2004). However, X-ray off-specular diffuse scattering intensities are always difficult to evaluate correctly since the instrumental-resolution dependent weak signals are hidden in large background intensities arising from the signals of other sources. Such measurements, therefore, are usually conducted independently of X-ray reflectivity measurements with a high angle-resolution system.
Previously, we have reported a new liquid-interface reflectometer developed at SPring-8 (Yano et al., 2007, 2009a). This reflectometer is equipped with a two-dimensional single X-ray photon-counting pixel array detector, PILATUS 100K (Dectris, Switzerland), and can achieve an X-ray reflectivity of almost 10−9 with an accumulation time of only 1 s at each angle, exhibiting enormous potential for rapid measurements. Time-resolved measurements with a time resolution of 3 min were performed for the adsorption of a globular protein on an air/water interface (Yano et al., 2009b,c). The PILATUS detector also offers many other advantages such as the ability to collect area images, a wide of 106, an excellent point-spread function of one pixel, zero dark noise and the option to set an for background suppression (Broennimann et al., 2006; Kraft et al., 2009), enabling measurement of the weak diffuse scattering signals that lie very close to the much stronger specular reflection.
In the present study we exploit the advantages of the two-dimensional pixel array detector to investigate both the X-ray specular reflection and the off-specular diffuse scattering intensities from two different liquid surfaces, a pure water surface and a
monolayer on water. By comparing our results with the well established capillary-wave theory, we show that the reflectometer can accurately measure the X-ray specular reflection and off-specular diffuse scattering intensities in an extremely short time.2. Scattering from liquid surfaces
2.1. Geometry
The scattering geometry is illustrated in Fig. 1. The incident wavevector kin strikes the liquid surface at an incident angle α. The scattered X-rays are characterized by the output wavevector kout, which makes an angle β with the surface and an angle 2θ with the plane of incidence. The Cartesian components of the wavevector transfer q = kout − kin are defined as
where k = 2π/λ.
2.2. X-ray specular reflectivity
In the specular reflection condition, the reflectivity is measured as a function of qz when qx = qy = 0, or equivalently β = α and 2θ = 0.
The X-ray specular reflectivity for liquid surfaces is described by the Born approximation (Pershan, 2000, 2009),
where RF is the Fresnel reflectivity for an ideally flat interface and is the intrinsic normal to the surface, which is expressed as
where 〈ρ(z)〉xy is the lateral average electron density profile. CW(qz, T, γ) is the surface roughness term due to capillary waves and is given by
with
where γ is the and qmax is the upper cut-off for capillary contributions, which is determined by the condition in which the number of capillary-wave modes is of the order of the number of molecules per unit surface area; this is equivalent to fixing qmax ≃ 2π/d, where d is of the order of the intermolecular distance. Δqres is the instrumental resolution, usually defined by the detector slits (Braslau et al., 1988; Pershan, 2009).
2.3. X-ray off-specular diffuse scattering
In off-specular diffuse scattering the scattering intensity is measured under non-specular conditions, i.e. α ≠ β or equivalently qx, qy ≠ 0. A β-scan method, in which the scattered intensity is measured as a function of β at constant α, has typically been conducted independently of X-ray reflectivity measurements. In the present study we used the reflection profile, normalized to the peak intensity of the reflection profile at an incident angle α of 0.01° (assumed to be equivalent to the incident beam intensity I0), as the off-specular diffuse scattering intensity.
The normalized intensity I/I0 is generally equal to the convolution of the differential dσ/dΩ with an appropriate instrumental resolution function Ξ (Fukuto et al., 1999),
The differential , 2009) and can be written as
for a homogeneous liquid surface is described by the capillary-wave model (Pershan, 2000for η = < 2, where A0 is the cross-sectional area of the incident beam, qc is the critical vector, and TF(α) is the Fresnel (Daillant & Gibaud, 1999; Tolan, 1999). The scattering from a homogeneous liquid surface is described by the characteristic power law, , of capillary-wave thermal diffuse scattering.
3. Experimental details
3.1. Liquid interface reflectometer using a pixel array detector
The liquid-interface reflectometer (Yano et al., 2007, 2009a) is installed at the undulator beamline BL37XU at SPring-8 (Terada et al., 2004). The experimental set-up is schematically given in Fig. 2.
An X-ray energy of 15 keV (λ = 0.826 Å) was selected for the X-ray reflectivity measurements. Two horizontal deflecting Rh-coated mirrors eliminated higher harmonics and focused the X-ray beam to a spot about 200 µm in the horizontal direction at the detector position. The design of the liquid-interface reflectometer (Yano et al., 2007, 2009a) is similar to the surface-horizontal spectrometers at other synchrotron facilities described previously (Als-Nielsen et al., 1982; Schlossman et al., 1997). A monochromator stabilization (MOSTAB) system stabilized the X-ray beam intensity by tuning of the of the first crystal of the monochromator (Kudo & Tanida, 2007). The X-ray beam deflected downwards by the Ge 111 crystal (C2) was collimated by the second slit (S2), which runs 50 µm vertically and 500 µm horizontally. The beam incident on the sample was about 1012 photons s−1. A trough made of aluminium with a teflon coating (100 cm2, 3 mm deep) was located halfway between the deflection crystal C2 and the detector. A single X-ray photon-counting pixel detector, the PILATUS 100K (Broennimann et al., 2006; Kraft et al., 2009), with an area of 487 × 195 pixels (172 µm pixel−1) was located 538 mm from the center of the trough. The integration time at each incident angle was 1 s. Each pixel of PILATUS contains a charge-sensitive amplifier, a shaper amplifier, a single-level discriminator and a 20-bit counter. The of each discriminator was set to 7.5 keV to suppress the low-energy background. The counting-rate capability depends on the operation mode of the storage ring at SPring-8, which is about 100 ns in the multi-bunch operation mode. This condition allows us to detect up to 106 counts pixel−1 s−1 within the of 10%. A set of aluminium sheets of thickness in the range 1−6 mm was employed as an attenuator at the incident angle α < 0.9° to prevent the exceeding 105 counts pixel−1 s−1. The seven axes of the motor drivers as shown in Fig. 3 were synchronized to start by a VME pulse motor controller (Furukawa & Matsumoto, 2004) to shorten the travel time to about 2 s for the change in incident angle.
The liquid samples were contained in the trough controlled at 298 K. The trough was covered with an acrylic hood with 6 µm-thick mylar windows for the X-ray measurements to suppress liquid evaporation. The accumulation time at each incident angle was 1 s for α < 2.0° and 10 s for 2.0° < α < 3.0°, meaning the overall time required to measure the reflection intensities for 81 incident angles was 5 min.
3.2. Liquid samples
X-ray reflectivity measurements of a water surface and a monolayer of 1-dodecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride on water were performed. The 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium salts (hereafter denoted as [Cnmim]Cl, where n is the alkyl chain length) are ionic liquids which have low melting temperatures owing to the low symmetry of the organic cations, which acts to reduce the lattice energy (Seddon, 1997). The [C12mim]Cl salt is a solid at room temperature and acts analogously to cationic surfactants owing to its long alkyl chain. The self-aggregation behavior has been studied previously (Blesic et al., 2007). In the present study we investigated the surface structure of an aqueous [C12mim]Cl solution at the (xcmc = 0.02 mol dm−3).
3.3. Data treatments
Fig. 4 shows typical images around the reflection peaks detected by PILATUS. For α = 0.7° the reflection intensity was detected through an aluminium attenuator of thickness 1 mm placed 10 mm from the detector, while at α ≥ 0.9° it was detected directly. The reflection peaks located at around (x, z) ≃ (70, 216) in pixels for all of the incident angles have long tails in the z-direction caused by diffuse scattering from the capillary waves. A small peak, known as a Yoneda wing (Yoneda, 1963), is clearly visible at z ≃ 170 for α = 0.9° as shown in Fig. 4(b); for α = 0.7°, shown in Fig. 4(a), the Debye–Scherrer rings of the aluminium attenuator observed at around z ≃ 180–190 almost overwhelm the Yoneda wing.
Since this reflection peak was detected over five pixels in the x-direction, we considered the intensity measured five pixels from the center of the peak to be background. The background intensity of 100–150 counts pixel−1 s−1 is almost independent of the X-ray incident angle. A reflection profile I(z) was obtained by summing the signal intensities and subtracting the background as
The factor of 5/6 is the ratio between the five pixels of the signals and the six pixels of the background. The total signal intensity corresponding to the first term in (7) and the background corresponding to the second term are shown in Fig. 5. In the case of α = 0.7°, the intensity is reduced to about a tenth by the 1 mm-thick aluminium attenuator placed at β − α < 2°. After the background subtraction, reflection profiles spanning a range of four orders of magnitudes were obtained. Since the diffuse scattering intensity decreases with the angle β, in contrast with the β-independent background intensity, the signal-to-background ratio becomes less than 10% in the region β − α > 1°.
4. Results and discussions
4.1. X-ray specular reflectivity
Fig. 6(a) shows X-ray reflectivity profiles of the liquid surfaces examined. The reflectivity is calculated by summing the reflection profiles (see Fig. 5) around the peak region of n pixels (7 pixels for water and 13 pixels for the aqueous [C12mim]Cl solution) and normalizing this value to the intensity of the incident beam, which was monitored using an The instrumental resolution, Δqres in equation (4), is defined for simplicity as the resolution in the qy direction, i.e. Δqy ≃ ksin(β)Δβ, where Δβ is related to the number of pixels summed to calculate the reflectivity as n pixels × 0.172 mm pixel−1 (538 mm)−1. In the higher qz range, however, Δqx should be taken into account in addition to Δqres to describe the capillary effect correctly (Pershan, 2009). The predicted capillary-wave model for water calculated using equations (2)–(4) with the parameters γ = 72.0 mN m−1, qmax ≃ 2π/d = 2π/2.8 Å−1 and = 1 (Braslau et al., 1988) shows good agreement with the observed reflectivity in the present qz range.
In the case of the aqueous [C12mim]Cl solution, the observed data, divided by the capillary-wave term CW(qz, T, γ) using parameters γ = 40 mN m−1 and qmax ≃ 2π/d = 2π/12 Å−1, were fitted using a two-box model. The refined electron density profile is shown in Fig. 6(b). Based on the electron densities of the close-packed structures [0.32 e Å−3 for the 0.33 e Å−3 for the imidazolium ring and 0.73 e Å−3 for the Cl− anion (Solutskin et al., 2005; Larriba et al., 2009)], the [C12mim]Cl molecules are considered to form a monolayer in which the dodecyl chain faces upwards and the Cl− anion locates next to the imidazolium ring at a depth of 10 Å.
4.2. X-ray off-specular diffuse scattering
Fig. 7 shows the normalized reflection profile of X-rays incident at angles of α = 0.9 and 1.2° detected in 1 s without the Al attenuator. The circles show the results for water, while the triangles show those for the aqueous [C12mim]Cl solution. The central peaks correspond to specular reflections. The dashed and solid curves in Fig. 7 correspond to the theoretically predicted intensities for the capillary-wave model calculated using equations (5) and (6). Since the differential in (6) diverges at qxy = 0, we calculated the diffuse scattering intensities in the region qxy > 10−5 Å−1. The calculated diffuse scattering intensities exhibit good agreement with the observed intensities, especially around the specular region, having instrumental resolutions of Δqx ≃ kΔ(2θ) and Δqy ≃ ksin(β)Δβ, with Δ(2θ) ≃ 2.3 pixels × 0.172 mm pixel−1 (538 mm)−1 and Δβ ≃ 3.0 pixels × 0.172 mm pixel−1 (538 mm)−1, which are 1.5 times larger than the FWHMs of the reflection profile at the incident angle α of 0.01°. This demonstrates the benefit of the excellent point-spread function of the PILATUS detector. The present result also suggests that the [C12mim]Cl monolayer is not a laterally inhomogeneous layer, which would lead to excess scattering above the predicted capillary-wave fluctuations.
5. Summary
We performed X-ray reflection measurements of a water surface using a recently developed liquid-interface reflectometer at SPring-8. The reflectometer, equipped with a two-dimensional single X-ray photon-counting pixel array detector, PILATUS, obtained an X-ray reflectivity curve towards 10−10 in 5 min. The detector was also found to be effective in analyzing the weak off-specular diffuse scattering signals in the vicinity of the specular reflection peaks. The results exhibited good agreement with theoretical predictions for ratios of the signal-to-background intensity of larger than 10%. X-ray reflection measurement of an aqueous solution of 1-dodecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride at the was also demonstrated. Based on the specular reflection, 1-dodecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride was considered to form a monolayer in which the dodecyl chain faces upwards and the Cl− anion locates next to the imidazolium ring on the water surface. The off-specular diffuse scattering indicated that the monolayer was laterally homogeneous because the observed intensity shows good agreement with that predicted by the capillary-wave model.
The present reflectometer accurately obtains the full range of X-ray specular and off-specular reflections in an extremely short time (1 s), having enormous potential to determine the out-of-plane and in-plane structures at an interface simultaneously. The methodology developed in the present work can be applied not only for liquid surfaces but also for other thin films.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to K. Iimura (Utsunomiya University), N. Ikeda (Fukuoka Women's University) and T. Takiue (Kyushu University) who made great efforts in developing the present liquid-interface reflectometer at SPring-8, and to P. S. Pershan (Harvard University) for helpful discussions and suggestions about the data analysis. The synchrotron radiation experiments were performed at BL37XU at SPring-8 facility with the approval of the Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute (JASRI) (Proposal Nos. 2009A1686, 2006A1124, 2006B1751, 2007A1737, 2007B1212, 2007B1353). The present study was partly supported by a Grant in Aid for Scientific Research (No. 18045029) in Priority Area `Science of Ionic Liquids' from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.
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