research papers
Study on the UV FEL single-shot damage threshold of an Au thin film
aInstitute of Advanced Science Facilities, Shenzhen 518107, People's Republic of China, bState Key Laboratory of Molecular Reaction Dynamics, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Dalian 116023, People's Republic of China, cUniversity of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 101408, People's Republic of China, dMOE Key Laboratory of Advanced Micro-Structured Materials, Shanghai 200092, People's Republic of China, and eInstitute of Precision Optical Engineering, School of Physics Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, People's Republic of China
*Correspondence e-mail: wbli@tongji.edu.cn, zhongyp@mail.iasf.ac.cn, zhangwq@mail.iasf.ac.cn
This article forms part of a virtual special issue containing papers presented at the PhotonMEADOW2023 workshop.
The damage threshold of an Au-coated flat mirror, one of the reflective optics installed on the FEL-2 beamline of the Dalian Coherent Light Source, China, upon far-UV free-electron laser irradiation is evaluated. The surface of the coating is characterized by profilometer and optical microscope. A theoretical approach of the phenomenon is also presented, by application of conventional single-pulse damage threshold calculations, a one-dimensional thermal diffusion model, as well as finite-element analysis with ANSYS.
Keywords: free-electron laser; beamline optics; thin film coating; single-shot damage threshold; Au.
1. Introduction
As a fourth-generation advanced light source, the free-electron laser (FEL) provides an extremely high intensity photon beam with ultra-short pulses, where wavelength varies from the infrared to hard X-rays (Allaria et al., 2012; Emma et al., 2010). Despite being of great interest in many scientific domains, the development and advancement of FELs also face challenges, of which we focus here on damage to reflective optics.
Optics such as thin-film-coated mirrors are widely used on beam transport systems of advanced light sources like synchrotron and free-electron laser facilities. High-intensity photon beams may cause irreversible permanent damage on the surface of mirrors (Pelka et al., 2009; Hau-Riege et al., 2010; Aquila et al., 2015; Koyama et al., 2016; Milov et al., 2018; Norman et al., 2012; Ishino et al., 2018; Juha et al., 2009; Barkusky et al., 2010; Li et al., 2021; Pan et al., 2022). Such damage may induce a negative impact on the optical performance of the optics, namely on the reflectivity and wavefront preservation. In some cases, the damage is too severe that it is necessary to re-polish, recoat or even repurchase the optics. To minimize unwanted yet possible damage, one should both select the coating for the optics and monitor carefully their working condition. For the coating selection, low-Z materials such as B4C are favorable due to their low absorption and high reflectance. Yet metal coatings like Au, Pt and Ru offer a higher critical angle leading to wider applications and more use cases. The working condition here mostly refers to the incidence fluence of the FEL beam on the optics and geometric conditions like the incidence angle between the FEL beam and the surface of the optics. The single-shot damage threshold (SSDT) may be used as a metric for the damage tolerance of the optics against the FEL irradiation. It is the energy density that describes the FEL energy absorbed by the coated thin film within a unit surface (per cm2, for example) that will likely cause irreversible surface damage. One must note that the multiple-shot case may lead to different conclusions concerning the damage threshold depending on the FEL repetition rate, but this is out of the scope of the discussion here, as explained later.
In this paper, we study the damage of a 200 nm Au film coated on a Si substrate irradiated by a FEL beam of 121.6 nm wavelength and 2 ps pulse length in normal incidence conditions. The selection of the wavelength is related to the application of the studied Au-coated optics. A 121.6 nm far-UV FEL beam is often used for scientific research performed at the Dalian Coherent Light Source (DCLS), China. It can efficiently excite hydrogen atoms (Xu et al., 2014; Kosmala et al., 2021; Yang et al., 2015; Chang et al., 2020; Xie et al., 2020; Foot, 2005) without generating unwanted spectroscopic background. This makes it a characteristic wavelength for research domains such as catalytic intermediates, chemical interstellar chemistry, fundamental physics, etc. As the temporal scale of the studied physical and chemical phenomena at DCLS ranges within the picosecond regime (Zhang et al., 2020; Chang et al., 2021; Zhou et al., 2019), the selection of a pulse length of 2 ps is also related to the various experimental requirements of the FEL beam. Different incidence pulse energies of the FEL are selected based on the theoretical single-shot damage threshold of the Au film.
2. Experimental setup
The sample is a 200 nm-thick Au film deposited on a 30 mm × 20 mm × 10 mm (L × W × H) Si substrate using physical vapor deposition. A 30 nm-thick Cr adhesion layer is inserted at the Au/Si interface to prevent the Au layer from peeling off; this is a spare piece of optics for one of the beamline instruments of the FEL-2 beamline at DCLS. It diagnoses the polarization of the incident FEL beam with four Au-coated mirrors that work as polarizers. The polarization state of the incident FEL is obtained by fitting the beam intensity passing through the polarizer as a function of the azimuth angle of the polarizer (Clemens et al., 2017; Gaballah et al., 2018).
The surface quality of the sample before and after the Au/Cr deposition is characterized by Zygo's phase-shifting Fizeau interferometry, which is widely used for precision measurements of optical wavefronts and surface profiles (de Groot, 1997, 2004; Vivo et al., 2016; Huang et al., 2020; Da Silva et al., 2023; Shreiber & Bruning, 2007). The result is presented in Fig. 1 for a slope error of about 3 µrad. In this case the sample may also imitate a flat reflecting mirror of a regular FEL beam transport system. A slight increase of about 14% peak-to-valley (PV) is observed after the coating process. The slope error also increases accordingly by about 10%. One must note that, for other samples of the same batch, PV and slope error may also slightly decrease after the coating, despite being relatively rare cases. Therefore, we may consider that the impact of the coating on the surface quality of this kind of optics is negligible.
The sample is mounted on a homemade vacuum-compatible holder, shown in Fig. 2. In this simple design a small piece of YAG fluorescent target is mounted above the sample to locate the beam position, and also to determine the beam spot profile. A slot above the YAG was originally left for a photodiode detector for incident beam intensity measurement (together with a solid attenuator covering the photodiode for protection purposes). Eventually a built-in intensity monitor installed at the upper stream of the beamline was used instead for determination of the incident FEL pulse energy. The intensity monitor is based on the principle of gas ionization – through the collection of ionized electrons the incident light intensity is determined according to the quantity of The sample can move horizontally by manual adjustment with four screws, and vertically by a drive motor from outside the vacuum chamber.
For the incident FEL beam, a wavelength of 121.6 nm is selected. The general working geometry of this mirror is grazing-incidence mode. We intentionally select normal incidence exposure to enhance the damage (higher incidence energy density due to smaller footprint, more absorption resulting from lower reflectance). By comparing the normal-/grazing-incidence cases it is possible to deduce a safe working threshold of the mirror. The profile of the beam spot is roughly measured with a charge-coupled device (CCD) from outside the chamber through the observation window. An example is presented in Fig. 3. The CCD is set 45° from the sample surface. It captures images of the visible fluorescent spot size on the YAG (of 5 mm × 5 mm size) generated from FEL irradiation. From the figure it can be seen that the profile of the light spot is obviously not an ideal Gaussian, due to obvious diffraction. Beam instability may also contribute, but is not discussed here. The size of the FEL beam is determined by Gaussian fitting of the gray scale of the images of the fluorescent spot which is about 1.2 mm [full width at half-maximum (FWHM)]. The geometry of the CCD (45° from the sample surface), which causes enlargement of the fitting result, is considered in the original image acquisition in order to recover the measurement equivalent to normal-incidence observation.
3. Results and discussion
An overview of the experimental result is given in Fig. 4. In each cell the three lines of data indicate the following sequence: measurement position, incidence FEL pulse energy, and time of exposure, from top to bottom. The four colors of the cells represent four types of observed results: red means surface damage is visually observed, and is (naturally) also observed by optical microscope and profilometer; orange means damage is not observed by the eye but is observed by microscope and profilometer; yellow means damage is only observed by profilometer; white means nothing is observed on the irradiated position by any available means. In the photograph in Fig. 4, a darkened halo may be observed around certain irradiated positions. This is likely due to carbon deposition during the irradiation process as the vacuum level is barely 10−6 mbar. Details about this carbon deposition will be discussed later.
The FEL pulse energy before and after each exposure is monitored by a photodiode. The recorded pulse energy value is the normalization of an average of a continuous reading over one minute for a repetition rate of 20 Hz.
For each irradiated position, whether visually observed or not, optical microscope and profilometer are applied to characterize the surface. A typical example of the acquired data is given in Fig. 5. For this particular point, the highest FEL pulse energy of 50 µJ is used with a long exposure time of 2.5 h. The crater on the surface of the thin film exhibits a shockwave resulting shape, which is typical for an ultra-fast ultra-intense beam–matter interaction with pico- and femtosecond pulse length (Aquila et al., 2015; Koyama et al., 2016; Milov et al., 2018; Norman et al., 2012; Ishino et al., 2018; Barkusky et al., 2010). From the first glimpse of the image taken by the optical microscope, one may easily misunderstand the high contrast between the crater center and undamaged area as evidence of the damage penetrating the entire layer all the way down to the substrate. But this is not in accordance with the fact that the Au film is 200 nm thick while the depth profiles of this crater along the X and Y axes of the surface shows that the crater is merely 40 nm deep. A reasonable explanation of this contrast would be the tremendously increased roughness of the irradiated crater center, which endures the majority of the incoming energy of the Gaussian-like distributed FEL beam. The center rises like a tower from a basin following hydrodynamic rules, in analogy with a water drop causing bounce-back of an originally calm liquid surface, as the damaged area is in the Au liquid phase during the damaging process. The increase of the roughness has two possible interpretations. First, the ultrafast bombardment generates Au droplets or clusters which take off from the irradiated surface; such material loss is related to the beam intensity distribution, but it also possesses its own randomness. Second, the previously mentioned carbon deposition due to may also play a role here. During the 2.5 h of FEL exposure, Au removal–redeposition and carbon deposition repeatedly occurs on the surface. The high-roughness area can be a physical mixture of Au and carbon. This deduction can be verified by performing comparative X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic measurements of carbon 1s spectra on both irradiated center and unirradiated area. Unfortunately, this is beyond our means at the moment.
Fig. 6 presents the variation of the crater shape while increasing the time of exposure from 5 s to 2 h 30 min with 50 µJ FEL pulse energy. At 5 s, the crater does not have a rise at its center, and the size of the crater is relatively small compared with the craters from longer exposure times. Starting from 50 s (or somewhere between 5 s and 50 s, to be precise), a rise at the crater center occurs. As the exposure time increases, it is easy to see an increase in the severity of the shockwave effect on the crater shape due to the ultrafast bombardment. This is good evidence that the surface is liquefied during the damaging process as it shows hydrodynamic behaviors. This is the basic consideration for our theoretical approaches in later sections.
In contrast to the 50 µJ cases, for the 5 µJ FEL exposure it is the crater with the shorter exposure time of 2 h 30 min that shows a rise in its center [Fig. 7(a)]. When the exposure time increases to 10 h, the rise in the center seems to have been flattened and smoothened [Fig. 7(b)]. A smaller and shallower `side crater' of the main crater can be observed, showing that the 1st-order and −1st-order diffraction of the FEL also cause damage. This indicates that the damage threshold may even be much lower than that of the 5 µJ case. Comparing Fig. 7 with Fig. 6, the shapes of the craters are also different from those of the 50 µJ cases. This is because variation of the incidence FEL pulse energy is realized by manipulating the parameters of the undulators. Consequently, the variation in beam shape appears as a side effect.
Fig. 8 presents the crater depth versus exposure time and dose for 5 µJ and 50 µJ FEL pulse energy. The data are summarized in Table 1. According to the trend, the extent of the surface damage becomes aggravated as the exposure time increases for both cases. For the 50 µJ cases, the crater depth remains around 5 nm for an exposure time from 5 s to 30 min. But the situation deteriorates sharply afterwards, showing a 40 nm crater depth after 2 h 30 min of FEL exposure. For the 5 µJ cases, the trend is rather mitigated. The crater depth smoothly increases from 0 to 12 nm as the exposure time goes from 5 min to 10 h. However, for both FEL pulse energies, saturation is not observed. One may predict further deterioration of the damage if the exposure time is extended. In Fig. 8, despite similarities in crater depth of the two curves (particularly for the 50 µJ/30 min and 50 µJ/2 h 30 min cases which are comparable dose-wise), the mechanism of damage aggravation may be much more complicated than being linearly proportional to the time of irradiation. Therefore, for the theoretical analysis in the following section, we will focus on the pulse energy instead of dose, which is a more blurred parameter.
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4. Theoretical approach
The damage of the Au thin film is simulated by using conventional single-pulse damage threshold calculation formulae, a one-dimensional thermal diffusion model and finite-element analysis with ANSYS (https://www.ansys.com/).
4.1. Calculation of the conventional single-pulse damage threshold
The principle of the conventional calculation method of the single-pulse damage threshold is to compare the irradiation energy received by a single atomic lattice, Watom, with the melting dose of the lattice, Wmelt, to determine whether damage can occur (Sinn et al., 2011). The basic formulas are as follows,
where kB is Boltzmann's constant, Tmelt is the melting point of the material, R is the reflectivity of the material, Wpulse is the incident light power, m is the θ is the grazing-incidence angle of the incident light relative to the surface of the optical element, bFWHM is the of the incident light spot, d is the and ρm is the material density. The condition of the film damage can be determined by comparing the irradiation energy received by a single atomic lattice with the irradiation dose required for the melting of the lattice. That is to say, damage occurs if Watom > Wmelt. The basic parameters of the material required for the above calculation are obtained from the CXRO database (Henke et al., 1993; https://cxro.lbl.gov/).
In our case, Watom > Wmelt when the single-pulse energy Wpulse > 233 µJ considering the irradiated surface of 1.2 mm (FWHM). Therefore, in theory there should be no damage for single-pulse energies of 5 µJ and 50 µJ. This is against our observation.
4.2. One-dimensional thermal diffusion
In this experiment the size of the light spot is about 1 mm, while the diffusion length in the depth direction (normal incidence) is only tens of nanometres, so the transverse temperature gradient is much smaller than the depth. In this case it is reasonable to use a one-dimensional thermal diffusion model (Sobierajski et al., 2016) to simulate the heat diffusion in the depth direction of the Au film after a single FEL irradiation. Because the damage of the Au film involves a solid–liquid phase change (the gasification process is ignored here), it is more convenient to describe the whole process with As a metal crystal, Au will continue to absorb heat after the temperature reaches the melting point, and the temperature will not change until it is completely melted. The temperature will not change during this process, but the will continue to increase (Eyres et al., 1946). The increased can be expressed by the latent heat of the phase change.
Therefore, the change of
in the process of Au film damage can be expressed by the following two formulas,wherein C(T) is the of the material, which is related to the temperature, and T0 is the reference temperature. In this experiment, T0 ≃ 298 K [H(T0) = 0]. For one-dimensional thermal diffusion, there are the following differential equations,
where h [J m−3] is the per unit volume of the sample, K [W m−1 K−1] is the of the sample, C [J km−3] is the of the sample and S [W m−3] is the heat source term. Since the K and C of materials are related to temperature, it is necessary to query the NIST database [thermodynamical parameters were taken from NIST Chemistry WebBook (https://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry/)] to obtain the K and C data in the temperature range 298–1337 K (Au melting point) and fit the functional relationship between K(T) and C(T). The data fitting image and function relationship are shown in Fig. 9. By using the data of Au shown in the figure, and the latent heat of the phase change of Au (66.2 J g−1), the melting of Au and the of liquid Au can be calculated to be 2.86 GJ m−3 and 4.07 GJ m−3, respectively. When the of Au is lower than 2.86 GJ m−3, the corresponding temperature of the Au film is lower than the melting point. When the of Au is higher than 2.86 GJ m−3 and lower than 4.07 GJ m−3, the temperature of the Au film is kept at the melting point and the melting continues. At this time damage begins to occur. When the of Au is higher than 4.07 GJ m−3, the heated part of the Au film is completely liquefied.
The heat source term S corresponds to the absorption of radiation. Its intensity decays exponentially with depth. This can be described by the Lambert–Beer law (Steen & Mazumder, 2010),
where R is the reflectivity of the Au film calculated from the complex from the CXRO database (Henke et al., 1993; https://cxro.lbl.gov/), P [W m−2] is the light source power density and Labs [m] is the which is about 13 nm under the experimental conditions.
One-dimensional thermal diffusion simulation is carried out for FEL pulse energies of 5 µJ and 50 µJ by applying the model mentioned above. The results are presented in Fig. 10. The areas for local of 2.86 GJ m−3 (for T = Tmelt) and 4.07 GJ m−3 (for T = Tliquid, start of the liquid phase) are marked in the figure using dashed and solid lines, respectively. Since the amount of heat that passes through the Au layer into the Cr layer is extremely small, the Cr layer is neglected in the model to simplify the calculations. As the repetition rate of the FEL beam is merely 20 Hz, which equals 50 ms between two adjacent pulses, heat accumulation will not occur in our case. The intrinsic cooling process, as well as the photoexcited dynamics and relaxation, are expected to be finished. Therefore, in this study, multiple-shot accumulated damage is not considered.
As the calculation mainly focuses on whether damage occurs, the complex case of reflectivity variation due to the topographic modification is not discussed. The FEL pulse length is approximate to the front seed laser pulse length, which is 2 ps (FWHM). The pulse time domain profile is considered as a Gaussian for the calculation.
4.3. Finite-element analysis with ANSYS
Multilayer elements of ANSYS software are applied for the finite-element analysis of the FEL exposure of the sample. In this analysis, we mainly focus on the temperature distribution of the Au film caused by the FEL exposure without considering material removal. The 200 nm Au film is equally decomposed into 50 layers of 4 nm Au, and the Cr adhesion layer is considered to be a 10 × 3 nm multilayer. The beam profile is taken from the CCD measurement (from Fig. 1) normalized by the pulse energies 5 µJ and 50 µJ individually while considering a single shot of the FEL of pulse length 2 ps (FWHM). Instead of a Gaussian fit, the original profile is used in this case. The result of the analysis is presented in Fig. 11. With the 5 µJ FEL pulse, the maximum temperature of the surface is only 275°C [Fig. 11(a)], which is far below the Au melting point of 1064°C. Thus, in theory, there should be no damage in this case. This is in line with the previous calculation of 1D thermal diffusion, but is against our experimental observation. One must note that the analysis using ANSYS may not be accurate for picosecond phenomena. Although the FEL pulse length of 2 ps is still of the order of magnitude of the phonon thermalization, ANSYS analysis is more dedicated for the thermal equilibrium case which is over 10 ps according to the literature (Caruso & Novko, 2022). With such consideration, it can be expected that the calculated temperature in the Au film is underestimated, which in return explains the mismatch between the calculations and the experimental results. Another contribution of such a mismatch could be the fact that the YAG+CCD spot size determination means lacks accuracy, thus the irradiated surface temperature is overestimated. For the 50 µJ FEL pulse, the surface temperature of the Au film reaches up to 2260°C [Fig. 11(b)] and causes surface damage due to the melting of Au.
5. Conclusion and outlook
In this paper, we evaluate the damage threshold of an Au-coated flat mirror upon UV FEL irradiation. According to the experimental result, the single-shot damage threshold is expected to be lower than 2 mJ cm−2, which relates to a 5 µJ FEL pulse energy considering a 1.2 mm (FWHM) spot. This value differs from the one that is predicted by multiple theoretical approaches, including conventional single-pulse damage threshold calculation formulae, one-dimensional thermal diffusion model and finite-element analysis with ANSYS. Conventional SSDT calculation predicts that no damage should occur, while the thermal diffusion model and finite-element analysis indicate that damage should occur with the FEL pulse energy somewhere between the two selected values of 5 µJ and 50 µJ. As the stability of the FEL pulse energy is not satisfactory, the accuracy of such a result is limited to the order of magnitude of the incidence pulse energy. Considering the fact that a damage crater is observed for the diffraction pattern of the FEL beam on the Au surface, the actual SSDT is expected to be even lower. The damage does not exhibit saturation. Therefore, further deterioration of the damage is expected to occur if the FEL exposure time is extended.
Grazing-incidence geometry can be considered to reduce the absorption of the FEL on the Au coating and increase the surface of the irradiated area. Mathematically this leads to a lower energy density for the exposure. The SSDT in this case can be converted and compared with the normal-incidence case. Furthermore, a photodiode can be placed after the sample mirror to monitor the reflectivity of the mirror throughout the entire FEL exposure process. In theory, by synchronizing the readings of such a photodiode with the data from an intensity monitor installed upstream of the beamline, one may obtain accurate reflectivity of the mirror for each pulse.
There may be another reason for the mismatch between the experimental results: the selection of beam spot characterization. Limited by the YAG resolution and sensitivity, it is likely that the detailed shape of the spot is missed (Manfredda et al., 2022). The scintillating area can be blurred and enlarged compared with the FEL beam This may lead to the fact that the irradiated surface is actually smaller than that measured by the CCD camera. In future experiments a pinhole of micrometre size can be considered, together with a photodiode mounted right after it, to probe the shape and intensity distribution of the millimetre-sized beam.
Footnotes
‡These authors contributed equally to this work.
Acknowledgements
Support from the operators of Dalian Coherent Light Source is gratefully acknowledged. Special thanks to M. Manfredda and D. Cocco for the inspirational discussions. Thanks to Grand Unified Optics for providing the samples and as-deposited characterizations.
Funding information
The following funding is acknowledged: National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant No. 12305360; grant No. 22288201); Scientific Instrument Developing Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (grant No. GJJSTD20190002); Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (grant No. RCBS20221008093327057).
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