X-ray Optics Fundamentals¶
This section provides the scientific background for X-ray optical property calculations performed by XRayLabTool.
Complex Refractive Index¶
For X-rays, materials have a complex refractive index:
Where:
n: Complex refractive index
δ (delta): Real part of refractive index decrement
β (beta): Imaginary part related to absorption
i: Imaginary unit
Physical Interpretation¶
Real Part (δ): - Controls phase velocity: \(v_{phase} = c/n_{real} = c/(1-\delta)\) - For X-rays, δ > 0, so phase velocity > c (but energy velocity < c) - Determines critical angle for total external reflection - Typically \(10^{-6}\) to \(10^{-4}\) for hard X-rays
Imaginary Part (β): - Controls absorption and attenuation - Related to absorption coefficient: \(\mu = 4\pi\beta/\lambda\) - Determines penetration depth - Generally β ≪ δ except near absorption edges
Calculation from Atomic Data¶
For a compound with multiple elements:
Where:
\(r_e = 2.818 \times 10^{-15}\) m (classical electron radius)
\(\lambda\): X-ray wavelength
\(n_i\): Number density of element i
\(f_1^i, f_2^i\): Atomic scattering factors for element i
Critical Angle for Total External Reflection¶
At grazing incidence, total external reflection occurs when:
For small angles (\(\theta_c\) in radians):
Converting to practical units:
Physical Significance¶
Total reflection: For angles θ < θc, X-rays are totally reflected
Mirror design: Critical angle determines useful angular range
Energy dependence: θc ∝ λ², so higher energies have smaller critical angles
Material choice: Higher electron density → larger critical angle
Attenuation and Absorption¶
Linear Absorption Coefficient¶
The linear absorption coefficient relates to the imaginary part of the refractive index:
With units of cm⁻¹ (or m⁻¹).
Mass Absorption Coefficient¶
Often more convenient for comparing materials:
Where ρ is the material density, giving units of cm²/g.
Attenuation Length¶
The 1/e attenuation length (distance for intensity to drop by factor e):
Beer-Lambert Law¶
Intensity decreases exponentially with thickness:
Where: - I₀: Initial intensity - t: Material thickness - μ: Linear absorption coefficient
Transmission and Reflection¶
Fresnel Equations for X-rays¶
For a smooth interface at grazing angle θ:
Reflectivity:
Transmission:
For absorbing materials, both reflection and transmission are reduced, with energy lost to absorption.
Applications in Synchrotron Optics¶
Mirror Design¶
Substrate Selection: - Higher δ → larger critical angle → increased reflectivity at higher angles - Lower β → less absorption → higher throughput - Thermal properties important for high-power applications
Coating Optimization: - Multilayer coatings can enhance reflectivity - Periodic structures create artificial Bragg reflections - Material combinations: W/B₄C, Ni/C, Mo/Si
Beamline Components¶
Windows and Filters: - Balance between transmission and contamination protection - Optimize thickness: thin enough for transmission, thick enough for strength - Common materials: Be, diamond, SiN membranes
Monochromator Crystals: - Silicon most common due to crystal structure - Darwin width determines energy resolution - Thermal management crucial for stability
Energy Dependence¶
Absorption Edges¶
Near absorption edges, scattering factors show sharp changes:
Pre-edge: Smooth energy dependence
Edge jump: Sharp increase in f₂ (absorption)
Post-edge: EXAFS oscillations in both f₁ and f₂
This creates opportunities and challenges: - Enhanced contrast near edges - Monochromator design must account for edge effects - Material choice depends on X-ray energy range
Scaling Laws¶
For energies well away from edges:
Therefore: - Critical angle decreases as E⁻¹ - Attenuation length increases as E³ - Higher energies are more penetrating
Practical Considerations¶
Surface Roughness¶
Real surfaces have roughness that reduces reflectivity:
Where σ is the RMS surface roughness.
Contamination¶
Surface contamination (carbon, oxides) affects optical properties: - Reduces reflectivity - Changes effective critical angle - Time-dependent degradation in some environments
Temperature Effects¶
Thermal expansion changes: - Lattice spacing (important for crystals) - Surface figure (thermal distortion) - Bulk density (usually small effect)
Measurement and Characterization¶
Experimental Techniques¶
Reflectometry: - Measure reflectivity vs angle at fixed energy - Determine δ and β from curve fitting - Requires high-quality optical surfaces
Transmission Measurements: - Measure attenuation through known thickness - Direct determination of absorption coefficient - Easier for high-Z materials
Energy Scans: - Vary energy at fixed geometry - Map out absorption edge structure - Useful for identifying elemental composition
Data Sources¶
XRayLabTool uses atomic scattering factor data from:
Henke Tables: Widely used standard (10 eV - 30 keV)
CXRO Database: Extended energy range with updates
NIST XCOM: Photoabsorption cross-sections
Theoretical calculations: For very light elements or high energies
The data combines experimental measurements with theoretical calculations, with interpolation between tabulated values for smooth energy dependence.
Further Reading¶
Textbooks: - Als-Nielsen & McMorrow: “Elements of Modern X-ray Physics” - Attwood: “Soft X-rays and Extreme Ultraviolet Radiation” - Willmott: “An Introduction to Synchrotron Radiation”
Online Resources: - CXRO X-ray database: http://henke.lbl.gov/optical_constants/ - NIST XCOM database: https://physics.nist.gov/xcom - ILL X-ray absorption database: https://www.ill.eu/xop