Literature DB >> 19575829

Ultracold electron source for single-shot, ultrafast electron diffraction.

S B van der Geer1, M J de Loos, E J D Vredenbregt, O J Luiten.   

Abstract

Ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) enables studies of structural dynamics at atomic length and timescales, i.e., 0.1 nm and 0.1 ps, in single-shot mode. At present UED experiments are based on femtosecond laser photoemission from solid state cathodes. These photoemission sources perform excellently, but are not sufficiently bright for single-shot studies of, for example, biomolecular samples. We propose a new type of electron source, based on near-threshold photoionization of a laser-cooled and trapped atomic gas. The electron temperature of these sources can be as low as 10 K, implying an increase in brightness by orders of magnitude. We investigate a setup consisting of an ultracold electron source and standard radio-frequency acceleration techniques by GPT tracking simulations. The simulations use realistic fields and include all pairwise Coulomb interactions. We show that in this setup 120 keV, 0.1 pC electron bunches can be produced with a longitudinal emittance sufficiently small for enabling sub-100 fs bunch lengths at 1% relative energy spread. A transverse root-mean-square normalized emittance of epsilon(x) = 10 nm is obtained, significantly better than from photoemission sources. Correlations in transverse phase-space indicate that the transverse emittance can be improved even further, enabling single-shot studies of biomolecular samples.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19575829     DOI: 10.1017/S143192760909076X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microsc Microanal        ISSN: 1431-9276            Impact factor:   4.127


  3 in total

1.  High-coherence electron bunches produced by femtosecond photoionization.

Authors:  W J Engelen; M A van der Heijden; D J Bakker; E J D Vredenbregt; O J Luiten
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 14.919

2.  Pulse length of ultracold electron bunches extracted from a laser cooled gas.

Authors:  J G H Franssen; T L I Frankort; E J D Vredenbregt; O J Luiten
Journal:  Struct Dyn       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 2.920

3.  Ultrafast electron diffraction using an ultracold source.

Authors:  M W van Mourik; W J Engelen; E J D Vredenbregt; O J Luiten
Journal:  Struct Dyn       Date:  2014-06-06       Impact factor: 2.920

  3 in total

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