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A
simplified design for ultra-sensitive X-ray detectors
offering more precise materials analysis has been
demonstrated at the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST). The advance is a step toward
making such devices cheaper and easier to produce.
Users may eventually include the semiconductor industry,
which needs better X-ray detectors to identify and
distinguish between nanoscale contaminant particles
on silicon wafers.
The new design, described in the Sept. 13 issue of
Applied Physics Letters,* is among the latest advances
in a decade of NIST research on superconducting "transition
edge" sensors (TES). These cryogenic sensors
absorb individual X-rays, and then measure the energy
of the X-ray by measuring the resulting rise in temperature.
The temperature is measured with a bilayer of normal
metal and superconducting metal that changes from
zero resistance (superconducting) to a slight resistance
level in response to the heat from the radiation.
By measuring the X-ray energy, NIST researchers can
identify the X-ray "fingerprints" of particular
elements.
NIST researchers have built systems offering 30 times
better X-ray energy resolution than detectors now
used in the semiconductor industry and are pursuing
further improvements such as novel detector geometries
and materials. In contrast to the usual bilayer TES
design, the sensor described in the APL paper combines
the normal and superconducting metals into one homogenous
layer. Manganese impurities are added to a 400-nanometer-thick
aluminum film to lower its superconducting transition
temperature to 100 milliKelvin. Fabrication requires
about half as many steps as the bilayer design. In
addition, the new design exhibits less "noise"
in the X-ray signals than is typical for TES sensors,
as well as a low sensitivity to magnetic fields that
could help in building stable instruments.
Scientists at the University of Notre Dame and Santa
Clara University also participated in the research.
The work was supported in part by NASA.
Media Contact:
Laura Ost, laura.ost@nist.gov, 301-975-4034
*S.W. Deiker, W. Doriese, G.C. Hilton, K.D. Irwin,
W.H. Rippard, J.N. Ullom, L.R. Vale, S.T. Ruggiero,
A. Williams and B.A. Young. 2004. Superconducting
transition edge sensor using dilute AlMn alloys. Applied
Physics Letters
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