RESUMO
High-resolution, high-sensitivity X-ray imaging is a real challenge in laser plasma diagnostic to attain reliable data in high-energy density plasma experiments. In this context, ultra-high-intensity lasers generate hot and dense plasma but only in a small volume. An experiment has been performed at the LULI2000 laser facility to diagnose such plasma conditions from thermal spectroscopic data. To image the emission zone plasma's Al Heß, a Fresnel-lens-based X-ray imager has been developed. It features a 846 µm-diameter Fresnel Phase Zone Plate (FPZP) and a Pd/B4C multilayer mirror (thickness d = 5.1 nm). This association can be used between 1500 eV and 2100 eV. The FPZP's efficiency was measured on a synchrotron facility (SOLEIL) and its spatial resolution in a laser facility (EQUINOX). The mirror reflectivity was measured on the synchrotron facility BESSY II. With experimental conditions, the system resolution reaches 3.8 ± 0.6 µm with an adequate efficiency in the 1800 eV-1900 eV energy range with a solid angle of 9 × 10-6 sr. Consequently, a FPZP is an excellent optics setup for high-resolution quasi-monochromatic X-ray imaging and provides a good collection angle. Bragg-Fresnel lenses, based on the principle of FPZP and mirrors, are currently designed for an X-ray imager at the Laser MégaJoule facility.
RESUMO
We present an experimental study and performance improvement of periodic and aperiodic Ni/SiC multilayer coatings. Periodic Ni/SiC multilayer mirrors have been coated and characterized by grazing incidence X-ray reflectometry at 8.048 keV (Cu Kα radiation) and by measurements at 3 keV and 5 keV on synchrotron radiation facilities. An interdiffusion effect is found between Ni and SiC layers. A two-material model, Ni(x)Si(y)/SiC, using a silicide instead of Ni, was used to fit the measurements. The addition of 0.6 nm W barrier layers at the interfaces allows a significant reduction of the interdiffusion between Ni and SiC. In order to obtain a specific reflectivity profile in the 2 - 8 keV energy range, we have designed and coated aperiodic multilayer mirrors by using Ni/SiC with and without W barrier layers. The experimental reflectivity profiles as a function of the photon energy were measured on a synchrotron radiation facility in both cases. Adding W barrier layers in Ni/SiC multilayers provides a better precision on the layer thicknesses and a very good agreement between the experimental data and the targeted spectral profile.