research papers
The ALBA spectroscopic LEEM-PEEM experimental station: layout and performance
aALBA Synchrotron Light Facility, Carretera BP 1413, Km. 3.3, Cerdanyola del Vallès, Barcelona 08290, Spain
*Correspondence e-mail: laballe@cells.es
The spectroscopic LEEM-PEEM experimental station at the CIRCE helical undulator beamline, which started user operation at the ALBA Synchrotron Light Facility in 2012, is presented. This station, based on an Elmitec LEEM III microscope with electron imaging energy analyzer, permits surfaces to be imaged with chemical, structural and magnetic sensitivity down to a lateral spatial resolution better than 20 nm with X-ray excited photoelectrons and 10 nm in LEEM and UV-PEEM modes. Rotation around the surface normal and application of electric and (weak) magnetic fields are possible in the microscope chamber. In situ surface preparation capabilities include ion sputtering, high-temperature flashing, exposure to gases, and metal evaporation with quick evaporator exchange. Results from experiments in a variety of fields and imaging modes will be presented in order to illustrate the ALBA XPEEM capabilities.
Keywords: spectromicroscopy; X-ray absorption; photoemission; LEEM; PEEM; X-ray magnetic dichroism.
1. Introduction
The ALBA XPEEM experimental station is based on a Spectroscopic PhotoEmission and Low Energy Electron Microscope (SPELEEM from Elmitec GmbH) permanently installed at the CIRCE beamline at the ALBA Synchrotron Light Facility, close to Barcelona (Spain) (https://www.cells.es/en). The beamline, based on a collimated-light plane-grating monochromator (Follath & Senf, 1997), provides soft X-ray photons in the 100–2000 eV energy range with high photon energy resolution and intensity, and full polarization control thanks to the APPLE II helical undulator used as source (Sasaki, 1994). It has been open to external users and in continuous improvement since October 2012. Beam time at CIRCE is allocated to academic users worldwide via peer-reviewed proposals submitted through the ALBA web portal (https://useroffice.cells.es/). Beam time is also available to industrial users.
In the following, we present the characteristics and features of the experimental station, briefly describe the different operation modes of the microscope, and show results representative of the performance demonstrated so far.
2. The experimental station layout
The experimental station is formed by five separable ultra-high-vacuum sections: load lock, entrance chamber, preparation chamber, main chamber and electron optics. The load lock can be evacuated from atmosphere to 10−6 mbar in less than half an hour, so that a sample can be introduced from air to the main chamber in less than one hour. The entrance chamber is an intermediate section between the load lock and the preparation chamber, containing a parking for up to five samples and a docking station for a vacuum suitcase used to transfer samples from and to other stations and preparation chambers. General views of the experimental station are shown in Fig. 1.
An I0 measurement chamber is installed directly upstream of the microscope, equipped with fluorescent screen, gold mesh, gold foil, gold evaporator and calibrated photodiode. However, in most cases the normalization signal is extracted directly from the drain current of the last focusing mirror.
Since the emergent synchrotron photon beam is always wider in the horizontal than in the vertical, and the microscope geometry imposes a 16° near-grazing incidence, the microscope chamber is oriented such that the sample surface is nearly horizontal (face-down), and thus the elongation due to the beam projection on the surface is along the narrow vertical dimension of the photon beam. A detailed finite element analysis was performed in order to optimize the microscope support in this unconventional geometry for minimum vibrations. An added advantage is an enhanced sample manipulator stability with respect to other setups with vertical sample surface.
The microscope, I0 and refocusing mirrors chambers are all mounted on a common synthetic granite support, designed to maximize rigidity while minimizing weight and thus low-frequency vibration modes. In this way, any position drift of the experimental station with respect to the source will be de-magnified by the same factor as the photon beam. The maximum demagnification reachable with the bendable refocusing Kirkpatrick–Baez (KB) mirror pair (Kirkpatrick & Baez, 1948) is 3.8:1 and 6.1:1 in the horizontal and vertical planes, respectively. The microscope chamber assembly itself is installed on the standard Elmitec aluminium baseplate and can be aligned with respect to the granite by a combination of precision levelers (AirLoc Schrepfer) and pusher elements. A specially designed link, visible in Fig. 2, avoids deformations due to differential expansion during full system bake-outs by permitting expansion of the Al plate and ensuring that it returns to the same position within less than 100 µm. The fine beam steering is performed with the refocusing mirror mechanics.
A simplified but quite accurate model of the full assembly was used to simulate the vibrational eigenfrequencies (Fig. 3, top). After installation, the resonance frequencies of the PEEM sample manipulator (top-most component) were obtained by measuring the spectrum of its response to a hammer shock with a Renishaw ML10 interferometer and a reference suspended on an elastic support. The interferometer reference vibrates at a frequency below 5 Hz, and attenuates by a factor of 103 any oscillation above 10 Hz. As can be seen on the graph in Fig. 3, the main resonance modes appear at 81.75 Hz and 92.51 Hz. Thanks to the absence of low-frequency resonances, the background mechanical noise at the manipulator is very low. The measured amplitude of the total oscillation, integrating for all frequencies above 10 Hz, is 18 nm r.m.s., similar to what was measured directly on the floor of the experimental hall.
3. The microscope
In addition to the beamline soft X-rays, enabling X-ray photoemission 6 electron gun for low-energy (LEEM) and diffraction (LEED) and a mercury lamp for UV-PEEM.
(XPEEM), the microscope has a LaBIn LEEM, electrons back-scattered at the sample surface are used to form a magnified image, providing surface structural characterization in real time with 10 nm ). In PEEM, electrons emitted after excitation with a photon source are collected to form the image (Harp & Tonner, 1988). The image formed by the electron-optical lens system is intensified by a micro-channel plate and finally detected on a phosphor screen by an in-air CCD camera. For a comprehensive review of surface microscopy with low-energy electrons, see Bauer (2014).
(Bauer, 1994XPEEM in combination with the high-brightness, tunable photon energy, and polarization of the CIRCE beamline provides a variety of laterally resolved operation modes based on X-ray absorption and via the X-ray magnetic circular and linear dichroism effects (XMCD and XMLD) at the appropriate absorption edges of ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic materials (Anders et al., 1999). The total resolution in photoemission mode is determined by the combination of the resolution of the hemispherical electron energy analyzer (down to below 0.15 eV) and that of the beamline, usually negligible in comparison with that of the analyzer. In X-ray absorption mode, the energy resolution is solely determined by the beamline E/ΔE, which is tunable up to 8000 throughout the photon energy range.
the latter thanks to the imaging electron energy filter included in the imaging column. Along with chemical contrast mechanisms, the fully variable polarization makes magnetic imaging possibleThe orientation of the photon beam polarization with respect to the sample for vertical, horizontal and circular polarizations is sketched in Fig. 4. As can be seen, linear polarization can be either fully in the surface plane (horizontal polarization) or mostly out of plane (vertical polarization). Since the manipulator can be rotated around the sample normal (azimuthal rotation), and linear polarization with intermediate angles can be provided by the undulator, any relative orientation of the photon electromagnetic field and the sample can be reached in linear polarization up to 74° out of plane. In circular polarization, used for magnetic dichroism, the maximum contrast is obtained for in-plane magnetization, with a small out-of-plane component (16° grazing incidence). XMCD at different azimuthal angles enables vectorial magnetometry in order to fully characterize the magnetization vector.
An additional operation mode consists of microspot X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (µ-XPS), where a micrometre-sized area is selected by an aperture placed at an image plane of the microscope. The energy-dispersive plane of the analyzer is projected onto the detector, so that a photoemission spectrum originating from the selected region is recorded in a single shot, thus enabling real-time micro-spectroscopy. The spectrum width is around 10 eV with a resolution below 0.15 eV.
Using X-ray illumination and the lenses in diffraction mode, photoelectron diffraction can be performed, imaging several et al. (1998).
at once for a chosen This method is particularly useful for exploring the dispersion of micrometre-sized areas. Details of the microscope electron optical layout and working modes can be found in SchmidtIn standard operation conditions, the sample is at 20 kV and 2 mm away from the objective lens. A reduced field mode (15 kV at the same working distance) is available for special samples and/or sample holders with increased discharge risk, such as insulating samples, surface electrodes, degassing surfaces, etc.
The microscope lenses and CCD detector are integrated at the software level in the ALBA beamlines control system, based on Sardana, a supervision, control and data acquisition (SCADA) package inspired by the TANGO collaboration (Coutinho et al., 2011). The integration of the microscope in the beamline control system allows for easy-to-use and flexible data acquisition macros.
4. The sample environment
The preparation chamber is equipped with a four-axes manipulator, including heating and temperature measurement capabilities, sputter gun, precision gas dosing valves, and a port for fast evaporator exchange. It also contains many spare ports for the installation of extra equipment. The base pressure is below 10−10 mbar, but up to 10−3 mbar of inert gases can be dosed. In the main or microscope chamber the typical pressure is in the low 10−10 mbar and gases can be dosed at pressures below 10−5 mbar, limited by arcing due to the high voltage between sample and objective lens during imaging.
The microscope chamber also has heating and temperature measurement capabilities, two fast exchange evaporator ports and a few spare ports pointing at the sample position.
The standard Elmitec sample holder has four contacts electrically insulated from the sample potential, typically used for a filament and a W/Re thermocouple. With this holder, electron bombardment is used to heat the sample with up to 150 W power, reaching temperatures up to 2000 K and above for short periods of time. The maximum temperature during imaging is limited by thermal drift and sample degassing to about 1600 K.
Sample cooling with liquid nitrogen is possible in the microscope, although indirectly through sapphire crystals providing the necessary high-voltage electrical insulation. 150 K is easily reached after a couple of hours and lower temperatures (>100 K) should be reachable with appropriate LN2 pressure and flow. However, as usual in this kind of instrument, the need to control thermal drifts and vibrations from liquid-nitrogen evaporation implies considerable stabilization time (up to a few hours) and somewhat degraded spatial resolution.
Sample holders with two additional electrical contacts (six in total) for special setups are available and usable both in the preparation and main chamber manipulators. These contacts are used for example in combination with a custom-built electronic module (integrated in the high voltage rack) which permits applying electrostatic voltages up to ±240 V at the sample, as well as measuring the sample resistance. A basic current source is also available and there is sufficient free space inside the high-voltage rack for additional user developments. The sample holder contacts can be tested after sample mounting on an external test bench prior to introduction into vacuum. The same test bench is used to pre-align the sample tilt using the reflection of a diode laser.
Special sample holder versions have been built for the in situ application of reversible in-plane and out-of-plane magnetic fields [the former adapted from the design of Kronast et al. (2010)], as well as electrostatic poling (Fig. 5). Sample holder electromagnets are powered by the standard filament current supply through a switching unit allowing spike-free current direction reversal, achieved by connecting a bypass between the power supply outlets (with a small resistance) while the polarity is switched. The magnetic fields applied at the measurement position are currently limited to about 20 mT, while in the sample parking it is possible to apply up to 200 mT in any in-plane direction using in-air permanent magnets. An adapter sample holder for in-vacuum transfer of samples to other beamline experimental stations and other setups at collaborating institutes is available to accommodate Specs- or Omicron-type sample plates.
Further developments in progress include biaxial in-plane magnetic fields, high-frequency cabling for the application of short pulses, and sample drain current measurements for integral absorption spectra.
5. Performance
5.1. Beam size and stability
For a 20 µm exit slit of the monochromator, the measured minimum spot size (attained with the smallest bending radius of the refocusing mirrors) is 3.2 µm × 35.6 µm FWHM (V × H), corresponding to a footprint on the sample of 11.6 µm × 35.6 µm FWHM (V × H). For most measurements the photon energy resolution attained with 100 µm exit slit (E/ΔE ≃ 6000) is more than enough, in which case the footprint on the sample is around 50 µm × 36 µm FWHM (V × H). Thus, fields of view of up to 50 µm-diameter can be imaged with good enough illumination to obtain a flat background in differential imaging (such as XMCD-PEEM) without need for defocusing the KB mirrors. The beam position stability at the sample is sub-micrometre both in the vertical and horizontal directions over several hours.
The high beam stability in terms of position and energy permits measuring for many hours without the need for readjustment. In fact, no energy shift can be detected over many hours with the typical energy step of 0.1 eV used in PEEM experiments. In Fig. 6, consecutive absorption C K-edge scans over almost 10 h are plotted to illustrate the photon energy stability. This corresponds to the worst case in terms of thermal load on the optics due to the low photon energy and the fact that scans were started immediately after opening the beamline front end. At present, ALBA is operating in top-up mode and we are thus confident that thermal effects will be negligible even as the operation current of the ring is increased.
5.2. Microscopy
The highest spatial resolution is obtained in LEEM mode, where a et al., 1998). For example, graphene with different number of layers can be easily distinguished due to its characteristic reflectivity as a function of electron energy, as shown in Fig. 7.
below 10 nm can be achieved, which corresponds to the state-of-the-art for a non-aberration-corrected instrument. In the vertical direction, contrast can reach the atomic level thanks to phase contrast at steps or quantum size effects in ultrathin films (AltmanFig. 8 depicts a micrograph of the Si(100)-2 × 1 surface acquired in dark-field LEEM mode. In this mode a diffracted electron beam is used to form the image. In this case, using the (0, 1/2) beam, atomic terraces with the two orthogonal domains of the 2 × 1 reconstruction are alternatively bright and dark. As can be seen in the top profile, the is about 8 nm (15–85% edge jump).
When imaging with photoelectrons, resolution is reduced with respect to LEEM due to two main factors: chromatic aberrations (mainly of the objective lens) and lower signal, leading to longer exposure times and worse statistics. Further experimental factors can affect spatial resolution such as photoemission , the XPEEM for both elemental and magnetic imaging is illustrated for permalloy nanostructures on a silicon substrate, measured at room temperature. The nanostructures are 80 nm × 200 nm × 30 nm (w × l × h) and have been previously magnetized in one (in-plane) direction. However, in remanence they are magnetized along their respective long axis due to shape anisotropy. Thus, while all nanostructures are visible in the chemical map (at the Fe L3 absorption edge), only those with in-plane magnetization axis along the X-ray incidence axis are visible in the difference image of opposite circular polarizations (XMCD-PEEM). In the present case, their magnetization is antiparallel to the spin direction of the incident photon beam and they thus appear dark. The average edge width (15–85% step intensity) is 15 and 20 nm, respectively, to our knowledge the best demonstrated so far in non-aberration-corrected PEEM instruments.
sample conductivity or sample drifts due to thermal variations. In Fig. 95.3. Spectroscopy
The full strength of the XPEEM is based on the combination of imaging and full spectroscopic capabilities. In spectro-microscopy, a stack of images is acquired while varying either the photon energy (absorption or , spectra for two regions with opposite magnetization on the surface of a single-crystalline magnetite sample (Fe3O4) are shown together with their difference. The beam incidence was along a magnetic easy axis, the acquisition time was 1 s per image, and the regions used for extracting the spectra were about 2 µm × 2 µm. As can be seen, both the direct spectra and the dichroic difference have excellent quality.
mode) or the photoelectron (photoemission or XPS mode). In this way, spectra can be obtained from individual regions within the field of view, down to the pixel level. For example, combining and circular polarization, an XMCD spectrum can be obtained by simply comparing the spectra of two oppositely magnetized regions or by comparing the spectra of a single region with two opposite helicities of the photon beam. In practice, the average of both is used in order to minimize experimental artifacts. In Fig. 10While in absorption mode the photon energy resolution directly corresponds to that of the beamline, in photoemission mode the limiting contribution stems from the microscope's photoelectron energy analyzer. The maximum resolution is achieved in micro-spot spectroscopy mode, where a small sample area is selected in an image plane by means of an aperture, and the dispersive plane of the analyzer is projected onto the detector. In this way, spectra from areas down to 0.5 µm in diameter can be measured, with an energy resolution down to almost 0.1 eV. Fig. 11 (top) is an example of such a µ-XPS spectrum and its fit, with Gaussian widths of 0.11 eV.
In imaging mode, a slit is inserted at the above-mentioned dispersive plane of the analyzer in order to limit the energy spread of the electrons used to form the image. As seen at the bottom of Fig. 11, in this mode the best energy resolution achieved so far with reasonable intensity is 0.25 eV while the expected limit value is slightly below 0.2 eV.
Both X-ray absorption measured via electron yield and are surface-sensitive techniques. Selecting the appropriate photoelectron with the energy analyzer one can choose the desired photoelectron escape depth and thus vary the surface sensitivity between about 5 nm and 0.5 nm.
5.4. Diffraction
Selecting a small sample area by means of an aperture in an image plane, such as is done for micro-spot ), and setting the microscope electron-optical system in diffraction mode, one can obtain energy-filtered photoelectron diffraction patterns, with the same energy resolution as available in spectro-microscopy. In this way, either core-level photoelectron diffraction or dispersions are measurable. Fig. 12(a) shows an example of a diffraction pattern of a single Ru(0001) terrace (5 µm diameter area), at the The full k-space half-sphere is recorded in a single shot, with a wavevector resolution of 0.1 Å−1 at 140 eV.
(see §5.3In the same lens mode but illuminating with the electron gun, micro-spot LEED is performed. Under the best conditions, i.e. restricting the electron illumination to a 0.5 µm-wide beam, we have determined a transfer width (or lateral spatial coherence) of 30 nm, while it is reduced to about 24 nm using an electron beam diameter of 5 µm. The transfer width is obtained by analyzing the spot profiles on a well known surface [for example, W(110) in Figs. 12(b) and 12(c)].
6. Conclusions
The spectroscopic LEEM-PEEM experimental station at the CIRCE beamline of the ALBA Synchrotron Light Facility is a versatile multi-technique instrument for state-of-the-art characterization of surfaces and thin films with a flexible sample environment. A variety of illumination and detection schemes permit a thorough structural, chemical and magnetic characterization in the same instrument with a switching time of minutes. The station has demonstrated excellent performance and is continuously evolving to accommodate user needs.
Acknowledgements
These experiments were performed at the CIRCE beamline at ALBA Synchrotron Light Facility with the collaboration of ALBA staff. Many people have contributed to the design, installation, commissioning and control of the ALBA XPEEM experimental station. Among them we would especially like to thank A. Milán, F. Becheri, A. Fontsere, A. Camps, N. González, L. Campos, J. F. Moreno, C. Ruget, L. Nikitina, J. Prieto and J. Prat. We also acknowledge the continuous support of Elmitec staff and the contributions by V. Pérez-Dieste and C. Escudero to the CIRCE beamline.
References
Altman, M. S., Chung, W. F. & Liu, C. H. (1998). Surf. Rev. Lett. 5, 1129–1141. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Anders, S., Padmore, H. A., Duarte, R. M., Renner, T., Stammler, T., Scholl, A., Scheinfein, M. R., Stöhr, J., Séve, L. & Sinkovic, B. (1999). Rev. Sci. Instrum. 70, 3973–3981. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Bauer, E. (1994). Rep. Prog. Phys. 57, 895–938. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Bauer, E. (2014). Surface Microscopy with Low Energy Electrons. New York: Springer. Google Scholar
Coutinho, T., Cuní, G., Fernandez-Carreiras, D., Klora, J., Pascual-Izarra, C., Reszela, Z. & Suñé, R. (2011). Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Accelerator and Large Experimental Physics Control Systems (ICALEPCS2011), pp. 10–14. Google Scholar
Follath, R. & Senf, F. (1997). Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. A 390, 388–394. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Harp, G. & Tonner, B. P. (1988). Rev. Sci. Instrum. 59, 853–859. Google Scholar
Kirkpatrick, P. & Baez, A. V. (1948). J. Opt. Soc. Am. 38, 766–774. CrossRef PubMed CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Kronast, F., Schlichting, J., Radu, F., Mishra, S. K., Noll, T. & Dürr, H. A. (2010). Surf. Interface Anal. 42, 1532–1536. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Martín, J. I., Nogués, J., Liu, K., Vicent, J. L. & Schuller, I. K. (2003). J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 256, 449–501. Google Scholar
Martín-García, L., Aballe, L., Martínez-Pabón, B., Mascaraque, A., Pérez, L., Abuín, M., Foerster, M. & de la Figuera, J. (2015b). In preparation. Google Scholar
Martín-García, L., Gargallo-Caballero, R., Monti, M., Foerster, M., Marco, J. F., Aballe, L. & de la Figuera, J. (2015a). Phys. Rev. B, 91, 020408(R). Google Scholar
Merino, P., Otero, G., Aballe, L., Foerster, M. & Martín-Gago, J. A. (2013). Unpublished. Google Scholar
Pesquera, D., Casal, B., Foerster, M., Aballe, L., Herranz, G. & Fontcuberta, J. (2013). Unpublished. Google Scholar
Sasaki, S. (1994). Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. A, 347, 83–86. CrossRef Web of Science Google Scholar
Schmidt, Th., Heun, S., Slezak, J., Diaz, J., Prince, K. C., Lilienkamp, G. & Bauer, E. (1998). Surf. Rev. Lett. 05, 1287–1296. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.