Influence of the liquid helium meniscus on neutron reflectometry data
Author(s) -
C. J. Kinane,
O. I. Kirichek,
Timothy Charlton,
P. V. E. McClintock
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
low temperature physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.356
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1090-6517
pISSN - 1063-777X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4941005
Subject(s) - meniscus , neutron reflectometry , optics , materials science , reflectometry , reflection (computer programming) , neutron , helium , momentum transfer , liquid helium , tube (container) , distortion (music) , physics , nuclear physics , atomic physics , composite material , neutron scattering , scattering , small angle neutron scattering , optoelectronics , time domain , incidence (geometry) , computer science , computer vision , programming language , amplifier , cmos
Neutron reflectometry offers a unique opportunity for the direct observation of nano-stratification in 3He-4He mixtures in the ultra-low temperature limit. Unfortunately the results of recent experiments could not be well-modelled on account of a seemingly anomalous variation of reflectivity with momentum transfer. We now hypothesize that this effect is attributable to an optical distortion caused by the liquid’s meniscus near the container wall. The validity of this idea is tested and confirmed through a subsidiary experiment on a D2O sample, showing that the meniscus can significantly distort results if the beam size in the horizontal plane is comparable with, or bigger than, the diameter of the container. The meniscus problem can be eliminated if the beam size is substantially smaller than the diameter of the container, such that reflection takes place only from the flat region of the liquid surface thus excluding the meniscus tails. Practical measures for minimising the meniscus distortion effect are discussed
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