Paper
21 November 1996 Design and fabrication of a 1.2-m long internally cooled silicon x-ray mirror for APS
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Abstract
This paper describes the specifications, design, and fabrication of a 1.2 meter long ultra high vacuum silicon mirror for use as the first optical element on an x-ray beamline at APS. The mirror, which is 1200 mm by 90 mm by 120 mm in size, intercepts the incident x-ray beam at 0.15 degrees. The thermal power incident on the mirror is 1.2 kW with a peak heat flux of 0.38 W/mm2. The heat is removed by flowing water through a set of channels configured in the face plate of the mirror. Various aspects of this mirror, including its purpose, utility, expected thermal and structural performance, cooling design, UHV provision, support and mounting, surface figure and finish, bonding of the cooling conduits, and other manufacturing steps are discussed.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Thomas W. Tonnessen, Ali M. Khounsary, Wenbing Yun, and Deming Shu "Design and fabrication of a 1.2-m long internally cooled silicon x-ray mirror for APS", Proc. SPIE 2855, High Heat Flux Engineering III, (21 November 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.259832
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Silicon

X-rays

3D modeling

Glasses

Heat flux

Polishing

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