| Literature DB >> 25931063 |
Bob Nagler1, Brice Arnold1, Gary Bouchard1, Richard F Boyce1, Richard M Boyce1, Alice Callen1, Marc Campell1, Ruben Curiel1, Eric Galtier1, Justin Garofoli1, Eduardo Granados1, Jerry Hastings1, Greg Hays1, Philip Heimann1, Richard W Lee1, Despina Milathianaki1, Lori Plummer1, Andreas Schropp1, Alex Wallace1, Marc Welch1, William White1, Zhou Xing1, Jing Yin1, James Young1, Ulf Zastrau1, Hae Ja Lee1.
Abstract
The LCLS beam provides revolutionary capabilities for studying the transient behavior of matter in extreme conditions. The particular strength of the Matter in Extreme Conditions instrument is that it combines the unique LCLS beam with high-power optical laser beams, and a suite of dedicated diagnostics tailored for this field of science. In this paper an overview of the beamline, the capabilities of the instrumentation, and selected highlights of experiments and commissioning results are presented.Entities:
Keywords: FEL; X-ray Thomson scattering; high energy density science; high-pressure science; warm dense matter
Year: 2015 PMID: 25931063 PMCID: PMC4416670 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577515004865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Example of the setup at MEC of a typical experiment and close-up of typical samples (inset). The target sample is in the center of the MEC vacuum chamber, on a motorized alignment stage with six degrees of freedom. The optical beam (in green) is overlapped on the sample with the LCLS X-ray beam using a motorized lens for steering. Long-distance microscopes are used to image both beams on a Ce:YAG scintillating target. An HAPG X-ray Thomson spectrometer records X-ray back-scatter. A large-area diffracton detector (CSPAD-560k) records elastic scatter for a solid angle of approximately 0.75 sr.
Figure 2Overview of the MEC instrument layout. Distances are indicated in meters from the interaction region (IR). M is the last off-set mirror, D are non-destructive intensity and alignment diagnostics, S&D are slits and non-destructive intensity diagnostics, TT is a timetool to measure the arrival time of the Ti:S laser relative to the X-ray pulse, Lenses are beryllium compound refractive lenses, M1 and M2 are mirrors to reject the ∼1% third harmonic that is present in the LCLS beam, WIN is a 25 µm Be window, and IR is the standard interaction region (i.e. the center of the MEC target chamber). The interaction region is located approximately 460 m downstream of the undulator.
X-ray parameters and capabilities of the MEC instrument
| Instrument name | MEC |
| Mirrors, incidence angle | 3 SiC on Si, 1.32mrad |
| Monochromaticity ( |
|
| Energy range (keV) | 2.5 to 11.0 (fundamental) |
| Unfocused beam size (m) | 1000 at 8keV |
| Focused beam size (m) | 2.0 to 100.0 |
| Focusing optics | Be lenses, 1D and 2D focusing |
| Flux (photonspulse1) |
|
| Pulse length (fs) | 5200 |
| Repetition rate (Hz) | 120, 60, 30, 10, 5, 1, on demand |
| Optical laser parameters | Ti:sapphire laser: 1J, 50fs, 5Hz, 800nm |
| Glass laser: 2 | |
| Standard detectors | CSPAD-140k, CSPAD-560k, |
| Princeton MTE-2048 and MTE-1300 | |
| Standard diagnostics | VISAR, FDI, X-ray Thomson scattering spectrometers |
| XUV spectrometer, phase-contrast imaging diagnostic |
Typical single-shot value.
Excluding beamline and instrument transmission.
Figure 3Ptychographic reconstruction of a nano-structured sample and illumination function. (a) Phase of the transmission function of the sample. Gray values indicate the phase shift in radians. (b) Complex-valued illumination function. Amplitude is encoded by brightness and phase by hue.
Figure 4Phase-contrast image of shock propagating through an aluminium sample.
Figure 5(a) Experimental Thomson scattering spectrum of the LCLS seeded beam demonstrating plasmon resolution capabitlities. (b) A schematic of the MEC X-ray Thomson scattering spectrometer. The spectrometer is motorized to collect scattering angles θs between 0 and 90°.
Figure 6X-ray diffraction of an aluminium sample. Debye–Scherrer rings of (a) unshocked sample and (b) sample 20 ns after shock loading. Lattice decompression and growth of crystallites are observed.