| Literature DB >> 30914665 |
Xi Yang1, Lihua Yu2, Victor Smaluk2, Guimei Wang2, Yoshitreu Hidaka2, Timur Shaftan2, Lewis Doom2, Danny Padrazo2, Junjie Li2, Mikhail Fedurin2, Weishi Wan3, Yimei Zhu2.
Abstract
In this article, we report our proof-of-principle design and experimental commissioning of a broadly tunable and low-cost transverse focusing lens system for MeV-energy electron beams. The lens system based on electromagnetic (EM) quadrupoles has been built as a part of the existing instrument for ultra-fast electron diffraction (UED) experiments at the Accelerator Test Facility II (ATF-II) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). We experimentally demonstrated the independent control of the size and divergence of the beam with the charge ranging from 1 to 13 pC. The charge density and divergence of the beam at the sample are the most important factors determining the quality of the Bragg-diffraction image (BDI). By applying the Robust Conjugate Directional Search (RCDS) algorithm for online optimization of the quadrupoles, the transverse beam size can be kept constant down to 75 µm from 1 to 13 pC. The charge density is nearly two orders of magnitude higher than the previously achieved value using a conventional solenoid. Using the BDI method we were able to extract the divergence of the beam in real-time and apply it to the emittance measurement for the first time. Our results agree well with simulations and with the traditional quadrupole scan method. The real-time divergence measurement opens the possibility of online optimization of the beam divergence (<0.2 mrad) at the sample with the increased beam charge. This optimization is crucial for the future development of single-shot ultra-fast electron microscope (UEM). Finally, we demonstrated BDI with significant improvement, up to 3 times higher peak intensity and 2 times sharper Bragg-diffraction peaks at 13 pC. The charge is now limited by the laser power and increasing charge may improve the quality of BDI further. The capability we demonstrated here provides us with opportunities for new sciences using near-parallel, bright and ultrafast electron beams for single-shot imaging, to directly visualize the dynamics of defects and nanostructured materials, or even record molecular movie, which are impossible using present electron-beam technologies.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30914665 PMCID: PMC6435643 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-39208-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1UED beamline with positions of the YAG screens and detector.
Figure 2Horizontal σx and vertical σy beam sizes along the beamline. Locations of the beamline elements are also shown.
Figure 3Horizontal beam size σ (left) and vertical beam size σ (right) at ФRF = 30°.
Figure 4BDI at 3.2 pC (top row) and 13.0 pC (bottom row) with (left column) and without (right column) quadrupoles. We normalize the maximum intensities of all images to the same level.
Figure 5Comparison of the BD intensity distribution via a 360° averaging after the standard background subtraction and ring distortion correction to the image. Blue curves are with and red curves are without optimized quadrupoles.
Figure 6Beam emittance: measurement and simulation. The emittance measured by the BD method is represented by red crosses. The emittance simulated using the Impact-T is shown as green triangles. The emittance measured via standard quadrupole scan is plotted as blue diamonds.