Abstract

X-ray reflectometry (XRR), a surface-sensitive technique widely used for characterizing surfaces, buried interfaces, thin films, and multilayers, enables determination of the electron density distribution perpendicular to a well-defined surface specularly reflecting X-rays. However, the electron density distribution parallel to the surface cannot be determined from an X-ray reflectivity curve. The electron density correlation in the lateral direction is usually probed by measuring the grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS). GISAXS measurement, however, typically requires using a collimated X-ray point beam to distinguish the GISAXS from the specularly reflected X-rays, and so the sample must be scanned in the lateral direction with the point beam to investigate variations in the surface and interface morphology for a region larger than the size of the beam. In this paper, we report a new approach based on X-ray grating interferometry: an X-ray sheet beam is used instead of an X-ray point beam. A method using this approach can simultaneously provide one-dimensional real-space images of X-ray reflectivity, surface curvature, and ‘dark-field’ contrast with a field-of-view of more than a few millimetres. As a demonstration, a sample having a 400 nm line and space SiO2 pattern with a depth of 10 nm on its surface was used, and the dark-field contrast due to the unresolved line and space structure, creating GISAXS in the lateral direction, was successfully observed. Quantitative analysis of these contrasts provided the real-space distribution of the structural parameters for a simple model of the grating structure. Our study paves the way to a new approach to structure analysis, providing a quantitative way to investigate real-space variations in surface and interface morphology through wavefront analysis.

Highlights

  • X-ray reflectometry (XRR) is a standard tool for characterizing surfaces, buried interfaces, thin films, and multilayers in various fields of materials science[1,2,3]

  • We report a novel approach for investigating surface and interface structural parameters through wavefront analysis based on X-ray grating interferometry[7,8,9,10,11,12]

  • The last one provides information on structural parameters that are inferred from grazing-incidence smallangle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) measurements

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Summary

OPEN Probing Surface Morphology using

WataruYashiro[1], Susumu Ikeda 2,Yasuo Wada[3], Kentaro Totsu4,Yoshio Suzuki5 & Akihisa Takeuchi 5. A sample having a 400 nm line and space SiO2 pattern with a depth of 10 nm on its surface was used, and the dark-field contrast due to the unresolved line and space structure, creating GISAXS in the lateral direction, was successfully observed Quantitative analysis of these contrasts provided the real-space distribution of the structural parameters for a simple model of the grating structure. It is used to measure an X-ray reflectivity curve, i.e. glancing-angle dependence of the intensity of specularly reflected X-rays with a scattering vector perpendicular to the sample surface, and thereby determine the electron density distribution in the depth direction.

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