Yashchuk Valeriy V, Gullikson Eric M, Howells Malcolm R, Irick Steve C, MacDowell Alastair A, McKinney Wayne R, Salmassi Farhad, Warwick Tony, Metz James P, Tonnessen Thomas W
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720-8199, USA.
Appl Opt. 2006 Jul 10;45(20):4833-42. doi: 10.1364/ao.45.004833.
We have used polished stainless steel as a mirror substrate to provide focusing of soft x rays in grazing-incidence reflection. The critical issue of the quality of the steel surface, polished and coated with gold, is discussed in detail. A comparison is made to a polished, gold-coated, electroless nickel surface, which provides a smoother finish. We used the surface height distributions, measured with an interferometric microscope and complemented by atomic-force microscope measurements, to compute power spectral densities and then to evaluate the surface roughness. The effects of roughness in reducing the specular reflectivity were verified by soft-x-ray measurements.