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EUV testing of multilayer mirrors: critical issues

Authors :
Theodore E. Madey
Shannon B. Hill
Steven E. Grantham
Saša Bajt
Thomas B. Lucatorto
Stefan Wurm
Charles S. Tarrio
Pei-yang Yan
Ivan Ermanoski
Obert Wood
Nora V. Edwards
Manish Chandhok
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
SPIE, 2006.

Abstract

Recently, while performing extensive EUV irradiation endurance testing on Ru-capped multilayer mirrors in the presence of elevated partial pressures of water and hydrocarbons, NIST has observed that the amount of EUV-induced damage actually decreases with increasing levels of water vapor above {approx} 5 x 10{sup -7} Torr. It is thought that the admitted water vapor may interact with otherwise stable, condensed carbonaceous species in an UHV vacuum system to increase the background levels of simple gaseous carbon-containing molecules. Some support for this hypothesis was demonstrated by observing the mitigating effect of very small levels of simple hydrocarbons with the intentional introduction of methyl alcohol in addition to the water vapor. It was found that the damage rate decreased by at least an order of magnitude when the partial pressure of methyl alcohol was just one percent of the water partial pressure. These observations indicate that the hydrocarbon components of the vacuum environment under actual testing conditions must be characterized and controlled to 10{sup -11} Torr or better in order to quantify the damage caused by high levels of water vapor. The possible effects of exposure beam size and out-of-band radiation on mirror lifetime testing will also be discussed.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f475687d7eb5135169ab4f6df72ecb6c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.656502