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Diamond Radiator Fabrication, Characterization and Performance for the GlueX Experiment

MetadataDetails
Publication Date2017-01-01
JournalOpenCommons at University of Connecticut (University of Connecticut)
AuthorsBrendan Pratt
Citations2
AnalysisFull AI Review Included

Technical Documentation & Analysis: Diamond Radiators for Gluonic Excitation Experiments (GlueX)

Section titled “Technical Documentation & Analysis: Diamond Radiators for Gluonic Excitation Experiments (GlueX)”

The research paper details the critical fabrication and characterization requirements for single-crystal diamond (SCD) radiators used in high-energy physics, specifically the GlueX experiment, which relies on Coherent Bremsstrahlung (CB) to generate linearly polarized photons.

  • Extreme Material Requirements: The success of CB requires ultra-high quality SCD with a whole-crystal rocking curve root mean square (r.m.s.) of less than 20 ”rad, operating under a 12 GeV electron beam.
  • Dimensional Challenge: Due to multiple scattering constraints, the central radiating region must be extremely thin, specifically between 10 ”m and 20 ”m.
  • Novel Fabrication Technique: A UV laser ablation technique (using a 193 nm Excimer laser) was successfully developed for differential thinning, allowing a 7 x 7 mm2 diamond window to be reduced to 17 ”m while retaining a thick outer frame for structural support.
  • Achieved Performance: The ablated and etched radiators achieved extremely low surface variations (down to 0.83 ”m r.m.s.) meeting GlueX specifications, validating laser ablation as a viable differential thinning method.
  • 6CCVD Value: 6CCVD specializes in supplying the high-purity, large-area MPCVD SCD precursors required for these demanding applications, ensuring superior starting material quality (low mosaic spread) crucial for meeting strict physics criteria.

The following critical performance parameters and material requirements were extracted from the radiator fabrication and characterization sections of the study.

ParameterValueUnitContext
Target ApplicationCoherent Bremsstrahlung (CB)N/AProduction of linearly polarized photons for GlueX
Required Thickness (Central Region)10 to 20”mUpper limit set by electron beam multiple scattering
Initial SCD Stock Dimensions7.08 x 7.08 x 1.208mm3Large-area non-electronic grade SCD used for trials
Target Crystal Quality Requirement< 20”radWhole-crystal rocking curve r.m.s. (mosaic spread)
Best Achieved Rocking Curve r.m.s. (JD70-104)49.9 ± 0.05”radAchieved by UV laser ablation + subsequent etching
Achieved Central Thickness (JD70-104)17 ± 0.5”mAfter uniform etching from 38 ”m initial ablation depth
Required Surface Variation (R.M.S.)< 5”mGlueX requirement, necessary for planarity
Achieved Surface Variation (Horizontal)0.83 ± 0.03”mMeets GlueX requirement
Excimer Laser Wavelength193nmArgon Fluorine (ArF) for UV laser ablation
Excimer Laser Energy80 - 120mJ/pulseOperating range (50 Hz repetition rate)
SCD Debye Temperature (Intrinsic)2200KReason diamond was chosen for stability/radiation hardness

The core challenge addressed was the differential thinning and maintenance of high crystal quality in large-area SCD. The key steps and parameters involved were:

  1. Material Selection: Non-electronic grade SCD (Element Six) wafers (300 ”m to 1.2 mm thick) were selected based on pre-ablation X-ray rocking curve measurements showing initial quality comparable to more expensive electronic grade material (r.m.s. 10.71 ”rad for sample JD70-2).
  2. UV Laser Ablation Setup: A Lambda Physik EMG 101 ArF excimer laser (193 nm) capable of 120 mJ per pulse was used. The diamond was mounted in an xyz computer-controlled translation stage under vacuum (500 - 650 mtorr).
  3. Differential Thinning: The goal was to mill a central thin membrane (20 ”m) while retaining a thick outer “frame” (typically >250 ”m) for stiffness, using a serpentine raster pattern.
  4. Ablation Depth Control: Ablation rate was measured as a function of laser energy and fitted with a second-order polynomial. This function was used in real-time to adjust the y-axis translation step size (∆y) via the formula: ∆y = (Rmeasured / Rdesired) x y-step. This compensation mechanism was critical for achieving surface variation uniformity of ±0.5 ”m.
  5. Detrenching Algorithm: Software correction was implemented to account for the exponential decay/taper of laser energy during the initial pulses of a sequence, which otherwise caused trenches up to 20 ”m deep at raster pattern boundaries.
  6. Amorphous Carbon Mitigation: Ablation was performed at controlled pressures (500-650 mtorr) to ensure sufficient oxygen content, facilitating the formation of CO/CO2 gas instead of allowing amorphous carbon debris to deposit back onto the diamond surface.
  7. Post-Ablation Etching: Ablated diamonds (initially 35-38 ”m) were subsequently etched uniformly by Applied Diamond using proprietary methods to reach the final target thickness (e.g., 17 ”m) and remove residual stress/non-diamond carbon layer damage caused by the ablation process.
  8. Characterization: Crystal quality was verified via Transmission Mode X-Ray Rocking Curve measurements at facilities like CHESS and CLS, requiring instrumental resolution <10 ”rad. Surface profile and roughness were characterized using Zygo white-light interferometry.

This research validates the use of highly specific processing techniques (differential laser ablation and post-ablation etching) applied to large-area, high-quality SCD. 6CCVD is uniquely positioned to supply and engineer the foundation materials required for replicating and advancing this sensitive research.

To replicate the high-performance radiator targets used in the GlueX experiment, researchers need starting materials that meet stringent purity and crystal quality standards.

  • Optical Grade SCD Wafers: The core requirement is low defect density and minimal mosaic spread. 6CCVD provides Optical Grade SCD grown via MPCVD, optimized for homogeneity and ultra-low lattice distortion, making it the ideal precursor stock for achieving the sub-20 ”rad rocking curve requirement.
  • Custom SCD Substrates: The original feedstock (up to 1.2 mm thick) required hundreds of hours of thinning. 6CCVD can supply SCD substrates pre-thinned to intermediate thicknesses (e.g., 50 ”m to 300 ”m, within our 0.1 ”m - 500 ”m range), dramatically reducing the subsequent laser processing time and lowering the risk of bulk crystal damage during fabrication.

The success of the differential thinning method hinges on precise geometry and specialized processing steps.

  • Custom Dimensions and Sizing: The paper used 7 x 7 mm2 radiators. 6CCVD routinely manufactures SCD and PCD wafers up to 125 mm in diameter. We offer custom laser cutting services to precisely define the perimeter, frame, and dog-ear geometry required for goniometer mounting (as illustrated in Figure 4.1a).
  • Precision Polishing & Metrology: While post-ablation etching was used to achieve the final R.M.S. of <5 ”m, 6CCVD guarantees SCD polishing quality better than Ra < 1 nm. Starting with superior surface quality minimizes uncertainty and risk during the UV ablation phase.
  • Advanced Metalization: While not required for this specific radiator design, 6CCVD offers in-house metalization (Au, Pt, Pd, Ti, W, Cu) for customers extending this research into micro-electronics, thermal management, or detector applications where thin films are necessary.

The challenges encountered—such as frame bending, micro-cracking, and the necessity for specific gas/pressure regimes during ablation—demonstrate the complexity of ultra-thin diamond processing.

  • In-house PhD Team Consultation: 6CCVD’s engineering and research team can assist clients facing similar challenges in high-energy physics or thermal management applications. We offer specialized consultation on material selection, crystal orientation, and defect management required for Coherent Bremsstrahlung (CB) radiator projects.
  • Supply Chain Resilience: We provide reliable, global shipping (DDU default, DDP available) of highly sensitive SCD material, ensuring consistent access to the quality components necessary for continuous experimental runs like GlueX.

For custom specifications or material consultation, visit 6ccvd.com or contact our engineering team directly.

View Original Abstract

The GlueX Experiment conducted in Newport News, VA requires a 9 GeV beam of linearly polarized photons to access the physics of gluonic excitations. Coherent bremsstrahlung (CB) was chosen as the radiation technique for its high intensity and degree of linear polarization. The CB radiator must be of sufficient crystal quality and have appropriate material properties for operating in a 12 GeV electron beam. Diamond, due to its high Debye temperature, was chosen as the CB radiator. Due to multiple scattering of the electron through the crystal, the central region of the radiator is constrained to a thickness of 20 ”m. The overall crystal quality must be high in order to reduce the photon beam emittance for proper collimation of unpolarized photons. To meet this specification, the diamond must not have a whole-crystal rocking curve greater than the electron beam emittance, on the order of 20 ”rad. This work describes the development of a novel laser ablation technique for differentially thinning single-crystal CVD diamond plate to meet the strict GlueX requirements. Transmission mode x-ray rocking curve measurements are presented which are used to characterize the diamond radiator lattice structure (mosaic spread) before and after laser ablation. Finally, an analysis of the ρ vector meson decay channel Îłp → π +π −p is discussed and used to extract the product of the beam asymmetry and polarization of the photon beam as well as spin density matrix elements (SDMEs) in the helicity reference frame. The observables measured from this analysis are strongly correlated to the performance of the diamond radiator used to produce the linearly polarized photon beam.