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Dive into the research topics where Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin is active.

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Featured researches published by Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin.


Optics Express | 2012

Spectral properties of La/B--based multilayer mirrors near the boron K absorption edge.

Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; E. Zoethout; Eric Louis; Andrei Mikhailovich Yakunin; S. Muellender; Frederik Bijkerk

The spectral properties of La/B, La/B(4)C, and LaN/B, LaN/B(4)C multilayer mirrors have been investigated in the 6.5-6.9 nm wavelength range based on measured B and B(4)C optical constants. Experimentally it is verified to what extent measured and tabulated optical constants are applicable for simulations of the reflectivity of these short period multilayer mirrors. The measured maximum reflectance at various wavelength values around the boron-K absorption edge is compared to calculated values from model systems. The measured reflectance profiles of La/B and La/B(4)C show a maximum at a slightly larger wavelength than calculations would predict based on the measured B and B(4)C optical constants. This is explained by the influence of a formed boron-lanthanum compound on the wavelength where the multilayer shows maximum reflectance. The maximum reflectance profiles of LaN/B and LaN/B(4)C multilayers can be described accurately by using the same boron atomic scattering factors, indicating boron in the LaN/B(4)C multilayer to be in a similar chemical state as boron in the LaN/B multilayer. It also indicates that nitridation of the La layer in the multilayer prevents the formation of La-B compounds. We show that the optimal wavelength for boron based optics is about 6.65 nm and depends on the B chemical state. Finally, using the measured B optical constants we are able to calculate the spectral response of the multilayers, enabling the prediction of the optimal parameters for the above mentioned multilayers.


Optics Express | 2013

Short period La/B and LaN/B multilayer mirrors for ~6.8 nm wavelength.

Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; E. Zoethout; Robbert Wilhelmus Elisabeth van de Kruijs; S.N. Yakunin; Eric Louis; Andrei Mikhailovich Yakunin; Vadim Yevgenyevich Banine; Stephan Müllender; Fred Bijkerk

In the first part of this article we experimentally show that contrast between the very thin layers of La and B enables close to theoretical reflectance. The reflectivity at 6.8 nm wavelength was measured from La/B multilayer mirrors with period thicknesses ranging from 3.5 to 7.2 nm at the appropriate angle for constructive interference. The difference between the measured reflectance and the reflectance calculated for a perfect multilayer structure decreases with increasing multilayer period. The reflectance of the multilayer with the largest period approaches the theoretical value, showing that the optical contrast between the very thin layers of these structures allows to experimentally access close to theoretical reflectance. In the second part of the article we discuss the structure of La/B and LaN/B multilayers. This set of multilayers is probed by hard X-rays (λ = 0.154 nm) and EUV radiation (λ = 6.8 nm). The structure is reconstructed based on a simultaneous fit of the grazing incidence hard X-ray reflectivity and the EUV reflectivity curves. The reflectivity analysis of the La/B and LaN/B multilayer mirrors shows that the lower reflectance of La/B mirrors compared to LaN/B mirrors can be explained by the presence of 5% of La atoms in the B layer and 63% of B in La layer. After multi-parametrical optimization of the LaN/B system, including the nitridation of La, the highest near normal incidence reflectivity of 57.3% at 6.6 nm wavelength has been measured from a multilayer mirror, containing 175 bi-layers. This is the highest value reported so far.


Optics Express | 2014

Combined EUV reflectance and X-ray reflectivity data analysis of periodic multilayer structures

S.N. Yakunin; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; Konstantin Nikolaev; R. W. E. van de Kruijs; M. A. Chuev; Frederik Bijkerk

We present a way to analyze the chemical composition of periodical multilayer structures using the simultaneous analysis of grazing incidence hard X-Ray reflectivity (GIXR) and normal incidence extreme ultraviolet reflectance (EUVR). This allows to combine the high sensitivity of GIXR data to layer and interface thicknesses with the sensitivity of EUVR to the layer densities and atomic compositions. This method was applied to the reconstruction of the layered structure of a LaN/B multilayer mirror with 3.5 nm periodicity. We have compared profiles obtained by simultaneous EUVR and GIXR and GIXR-only data analysis, both reconstructed profiles result in a similar description of the layered structure. However, the simultaneous analysis of both EUVR and GIXR by a single algorithm lead to a ∼ 2x increased accuracy of the reconstructed layered model, or a more narrow range of solutions, as compared to the GIXR analysis only. It also explains the inherent difficulty of accurately predicting EUV reflectivity from a GIXR-only analysis.


Journal of Micro-nanolithography Mems and Moems | 2012

Wavelength selection for multilayer coatings for lithography generation beyond extreme ultraviolet

Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; E. Zoethout; Eric Louis; Andrei Mikhailovich Yakunin; S. Muellender; Frederik Bijkerk

Abstract. The spectral properties of LaN/B and LaN/B4C multilayer mirrors have been investigated in the 6.5 to 6.9 nm wavelength range, based on measured B and B4C optical constants. We show that the wavelength of optimal reflectance for boron-based optics is between 6.63 and 6.65 nm, depending on the boron chemical state. The wavelength of the maximum reflectance of the LaN/B4C multilayer system is confirmed experimentally. Calculations of the wavelength-integrated reflectance for perfect ten-multilayer-mirror stacks show that a B-based optical column can be optimized for a wavelength larger than 6.65 nm.


Journal of Micro-nanolithography Mems and Moems | 2014

Diffusion-induced structural changes in La/B-based multilayers for 6.7-nm radiation

S.L. Nyabero; Robbert Wilhelmus Elisabeth van de Kruijs; Andrey Yakshin; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; J. Bosgra; Frederik Bijkerk

Abstract. The thermal stability of La/B and LaN/B multilayers was investigated. The two multilayer systems were found to have comparable subångström period expansion upon annealing in the temperature range of 250°C to 400°C. For La/B multilayers, wide angle x-ray diffraction analysis revealed that the size of LaB6 crystallites present did not change significantly upon thermal treatment. Using grazing incidence x-ray reflectometry, strong change in the internal structure due to interdiffusion at the interfaces of La/B multilayers was observed after annealing. This, coupled to the unchanged crystallinity, suggested the growth of amorphous lanthanum boride interlayers. At wavelength reflectance, measurements showed that as-deposited LaN/B multilayers had an enhanced optical contrast compared with La/B. During thermal loading, the rate of diffusion-induced reflectance decrease in LaN/B multilayers was slower than in La/B. The enhanced thermal stability of LaN/B was attributed to the slower growth of LaN-B interfaces compared with La-B.


Crystallography Reports | 2013

Determination of preferential molecular orientation in porphyrin-fullerene dyad ZnDHD6ee monolayers by the X-ray standing-wave method and X-ray reflectometry

A. Yu. Seregin; Yu. A. D’yakova; S. N. Yakunin; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; A. S. Alekseev; V. V. Klechkovskaya; E. Yu. Tereschenko; Helge Lemmetyinen; L. A. Feigin; M. V. Kovalchuk

Monolayers of porphyrin-fullerene dyad molecules with zinc atoms incorporated into the porphyrin ring (ZnDHD6ee) on the surface of aqueous subphase and on Si substrates have been investigated by the X-ray standing-wave method and X-ray reflectometry. The experiments have been performed under laboratory conditions and on synchrotron radiation sources (KMC-2 station of BESSY II (Berlin) and Langmuir station at the National Research Centre “Kurchatov Institute”). Depth distributions of Zn atoms and electron density in the monolayer film are calculated. On the basis of the analysis of these distributions, it is concluded that ZnDHD6ee dyad molecules in monolayers have preferential orientation. The data obtained indicate that the molecules in monolayer film retain their orientation when the monolayer is transferred from a liquid subphase surface onto a solid substrate.


Optics Express | 2016

Role of heat accumulation in the multi-shot damage of silicon irradiated with femtosecond XUV pulses at a 1 Mhz repetition rate

R. Sobierajski; Iwanna Jacyna; Piotr Dłużewski; Marcin T. Klepka; D. Klinger; J.B. Pełka; T. Burian; V. Hajkova; L. Juha; Karel Saksl; Vojtěch Vozda; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; Eric Louis; Bart Faatz; Kai Tiedtke; S. Toleikis; Hartmut Enkisch; Martin Hermann; Sebastian Strobel; R.A. Loch; J. Chalupsky

The role played by heat accumulation in multi-shot damage of silicon was studied. Bulk silicon samples were exposed to intense XUV monochromatic radiation of a 13.5 nm wavelength in a series of 400 femtosecond pulses, repeated with a 1 MHz rate (pulse trains) at the FLASH facility in Hamburg. The observed surface morphological and structural modifications are formed as a result of sample surface melting. Modifications are threshold dependent on the mean fluence of the incident pulse train, with all threshold values in the range of approximately 36-40 mJ/cm2. Experimental data is supported by a theoretical model described by the heat diffusion equation. The threshold for reaching the melting temperature (45 mJ/cm2) and liquid state (54 mJ/cm2), estimated from this model, is in accordance with experimental values within measurement error. The model indicates a significant role of heat accumulation in surface modification processes.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

Influence of noble gas ion polishing species on extreme ultraviolet mirrors

A. J. R. van den Boogaard; E. Zoethout; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; E. Louis; Frederik Bijkerk

Low energy ion polishing is attractive in thin films because of the small interaction zone with the treated material. In this context, various noble gases (Ne, Ar, Kr, and Xe) have been applied for low energy ion polishing of interfaces in nanoscale optical Mo/Si multilayers in order to mitigate the evolving roughness during the deposition process. The interface morphology has been studied by grazing incidence small angle x-ray scattering, the multilayer composition by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and the general performance by extreme ultraviolet (EUV) reflectometry. Both the average roughness level and the vertical correlation length of the roughness can be reduced significantly by increasing the atomic mass of the ion species applied for polishing. Maximum EUV reflectance is observed for Krþ-polishing, while Xeþ-polishing shows a superior structure. This apparent contradiction is explained by taking into account the optical absorption from noble gas residuals in the amorphous silicon layers.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

Model independent X-ray standing wave analysis of periodic multilayer structures

S.N. Yakunin; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; R. W. E. van de Kruijs; M. A. Chuev; E. M. Pashaev; E. Zoethout; E. Louis; S. Yu. Seregin; Ilia A. Subbotin; D. V. Novikov; Frederik Bijkerk; M. V. Kovalchuk

We present a model independent approach for the reconstruction of the atomic concentration profile in a nanoscale layered structure, as measured using the X-ray fluorescence yield modulated by an X-ray standing wave (XSW). The approach is based on the direct regularized solution of the system of linear equations that characterizes the fluorescence yield. The suggested technique was optimized for, but not limited to, the analysis of periodic layered structures where the XSW is formed under Bragg conditions. The developed approach was applied to the reconstruction of the atomic concentration profiles for LaN/BN multilayers with 50 periods of 35 °A thick layers. The object is especially difficult to analyse with traditional methods, as the estimated thickness of the interface region between the constituent materials is comparable to the individual layer thicknesses. However, using the suggested technique it was possible to reconstruct the La atomic profile, showing that the La atoms stay localized within the LaN layers and interfaces and do not diffuse into the BN layer. The atomic distributions were found with an accuracy of 1 °A. The analysis of the Kr fluorescence yield showed that Kr atoms originating from the sputter gas are trapped in both the LaN-on-BN and the BN-on-LaN interfaces.


Optics Express | 2018

Mechanism of single-shot damage of Ru thin films irradiated by femtosecond extreme UV free-electron laser

Igor Milov; Igor Alexandrovich Makhotkin; R. Sobierajski; Nikita Medvedev; Vladimir Lipp; J. Chalupský; Jacobus Marinus Sturm; Kai Tiedtke; Gosse Charles De Vries; Michael Störmer; Frank Siewert; Robbert Wilhelmus Elisabeth van de Kruijs; Eric Louis; Iwanna Jacyna; M. Jurek; L. Juha; V. Hajkova; Vojtěch Vozda; T. Burian; Karel Saksl; Bart Faatz; Barbara Keitel; Elke Plönjes; Siegfried Schreiber; S. Toleikis; R.A. Loch; Martin Hermann; Sebastian Strobel; Han-Kwang Nienhuys; Grzegorz Gwalt

Ruthenium is a perspective material to be used for XUV mirrors at free-electron laser facilities. Yet, it is still poorly studied in the context of ultrafast laser-matter interaction. In this work, we present single-shot damage studies of thin Ru films irradiated by femtosecond XUV free-electron laser pulses at FLASH. Ex-situ analysis of the damaged spots, performed by different types of microscopy, shows that the weakest detected damage is surface roughening. For higher fluences we observe ablation of Ru. Combined simulations using Monte-Carlo code XCASCADE(3D) and the two-temperature model reveal that the damage mechanism is photomechanical spallation, similar to the case of irradiating the target with optical lasers. The analogy with the optical damage studies enables us to explain the observed damage morphologies.

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Frederik Bijkerk

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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Eric Louis

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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Igor Milov

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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