Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5466633 | Ultramicroscopy | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
To understand and control the basic functions of physical, chemical and biological processes from micron to nano-meter scale, an instrument capable of visualizing transient structural changes of inhomogeneous materials with atomic spatial and temporal resolutions, is required. One such technique is femtosecond electron microdiffraction, in which a short electron pulse with femtosecond-scale duration is focused into a micron-scale spot and used to obtain diffraction images to resolve ultrafast structural dynamics over a localized crystalline domain. In this letter, we report the experimental demonstration of time-resolved mega-electron-volt electron microdiffraction which achieves a 5â¯Î¼m root-mean-square (rms) beam size on the sample and a 110 fs rms temporal resolution. Using pulses of 10k electrons at 4.2 MeV energy with a normalized emittance 3â¯nm-rad, we obtained high quality diffraction from a single 10â¯Î¼m paraffin (C44H90) crystal. The phonon softening mode in optical-pumped polycrystalline Bi was also time-resolved, demonstrating the temporal resolution limits of the instrument. This new characterization capability will open many research opportunities in material and biological sciences.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
X. Shen, R.K. Li, U. Lundström, T.J. Lane, A.H. Reid, S.P. Weathersby, X.J. Wang,