| Literature DB >> 26798772 |
J Szlachetko, C J Milne1, J Hoszowska2, J-Cl Dousse2, W Błachucki2, J Sà1, Y Kayser1, M Messerschmidt3, R Abela1, S Boutet3, C David1, G Williams3, M Pajek4, B D Patterson1, G Smolentsev1, J A van Bokhoven, M Nachtegaal1.
Abstract
Physical, biological, and chemical transformations are initiated by changes in the electronic configuration of the species involved. These electronic changes occur on the timescales of attoseconds (10(-18) s) to femtoseconds (10(-15) s) and drive all subsequent electronic reorganization as the system moves to a new equilibrium or quasi-equilibrium state. The ability to detect the dynamics of these electronic changes is crucial for understanding the potential energy surfaces upon which chemical and biological reactions take place. Here, we report on the determination of the electronic structure of matter using a single self-seeded femtosecond x-ray pulse from the Linac Coherent Light Source hard x-ray free electron laser. By measuring the high energy resolution off-resonant spectrum (HEROS), we were able to obtain information about the electronic density of states with a single femtosecond x-ray pulse. We show that the unoccupied electronic states of the scattering atom may be determined on a shot-to-shot basis and that the measured spectral shape is independent of the large intensity fluctuations of the incoming x-ray beam. Moreover, we demonstrate the chemical sensitivity and single-shot capability and limitations of HEROS, which enables the technique to track the electronic structural dynamics in matter on femtosecond time scales, making it an ideal probe technique for time-resolved X-ray experiments.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26798772 PMCID: PMC4711597 DOI: 10.1063/1.4868260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Struct Dyn ISSN: 2329-7778 Impact factor: 2.920
FIG. 1.Experimental setup for a high energy resolution off-resonant experiment at an x-ray free electron laser source. The first part of the LCLS undulator is used to generate sufficient X-ray energy through the SASE process, to generate a monochromatic seed pulse using a diamond crystal. This seed interacts with the electron beam and results in amplification of only a narrow energy bandwidth for the second part of the undulator. As a result monochromatic, 50 fs long x-ray pulses incident on the sample are obtained. The x-ray beam energy is tuned to below an absorption edge (E1 < Einitial) to access the off-resonant excitations. The resulting x-ray fluorescence is recorded in dispersive mode by means of a von Hamos spectrometer consisting of a cylindrically bent crystal and a position sensitive detector.
FIG. 2.HEROS spectra of Cu metal for 2000 self-seeded shots (black curve). The error bars represent the standard deviation of the total counts. For comparison, we plot the calculated spectrum using the Kramers-Heisenberg relation and a Cu K-edge XAS spectrum recorded at a synchrotron facility shown in inset (for more details see the text). The calculated curve represents the sum of two spectra relating to the final electronic states of 2p3/2 and 2p1/2.
FIG. 3.HEROS spectra of Cu (black) and CuO (red) recorded for 2000 and 1000 XFEL pulses, respectively. For comparison, the spectra were normalized to 1 at an emission x-ray energy of 7980 eV. The origins of the marked resonances A, B, C, and D are discussed in the text.
FIG. 4.HEROS spectra of Cu recorded for different number of shots. As shown, a 50 fs long X-ray pulse allows the main characteristic features (rising edge and resonance A) of the Cu electronic structure to be distinguished. For comparison, the calculated HEROS spectrum is plotted with a black dashed line. The marked features A, B, A′, and B′ are discussed in the text.