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Journal article

A conical slit for three-dimensional XRD mapping

From

Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark1

Traditionally, depth resolution in diffraction experiments is obtained by inserting pinholes in both the incoming and diffracted beam. For materials science investigations of local strain and texture properties this leads to very slow data-acquisition rates, especially when characterization is performed on the level of the individual grains.

To circumvent this problem a conical slit has been manufactured by wire-electrodischarge machining. The conical slit has six 25 microm-thick conically shaped openings matching six of the Debye-Scherrer cones from a face-centred-cubic powder. By combining the slit with a microfocused incoming beam of hard X-rays, an embedded gauge volume is defined.

Using a two-dimensional detector, fast and complete information can be obtained regarding the texture and strain properties of the material within this particular gauge volume. The average machining and assemblage errors of the conical slit are found both to be of the order of 5 microm. An algorithm for alignment of the slit is established, and the potential of the technique is illustrated with an example of grain mapping in a 4.5 mm-thick Cu sample.

Language: English
Year: 2000
Pages: 103-109
ISSN: 16005775 and 09090495
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1107/S0909049500000625
ORCIDs: Fæster Nielsen, Søren and Poulsen, H.F.

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