| Literature DB >> 32884061 |
A Descamps1,2, B K Ofori-Okai3, K Appel4, V Cerantola4, A Comley5, J H Eggert6, L B Fletcher3, D O Gericke7, S Göde4, O Humphries8, O Karnbach8, A Lazicki6, R Loetzsch9,10, D McGonegle5,8, C A J Palmer11, C Plueckthun4, T R Preston4, R Redmer12, D G Senesky13, C Strohm4,14, I Uschmann9,10, T G White15, L Wollenweber4, G Monaco16, J S Wark8, J B Hastings3, U Zastrau4, G Gregori8, S H Glenzer3, E E McBride3.
Abstract
We present a method to determine the bulk temperature of a single crystal diamond sample at an X-Ray free electron laser using inelastic X-ray scattering. The experiment was performed at the high energy density instrument at the European XFEL GmbH, Germany. The technique, based on inelastic X-ray scattering and the principle of detailed balance, was demonstrated to give accurate temperature measurements, within [Formula: see text] for both room temperature diamond and heated diamond to 500 K. Here, the temperature was increased in a controlled way using a resistive heater to test theoretical predictions of the scaling of the signal with temperature. The method was tested by validating the energy of the phonon modes with previous measurements made at room temperature using inelastic X-ray scattering and neutron scattering techniques. This technique could be used to determine the bulk temperature in transient systems with a temporal resolution of 50 fs and for which accurate measurements of thermodynamic properties are vital to build accurate equation of state and transport models.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32884061 PMCID: PMC7471281 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71350-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Sketch of the experimental setup used to perform millielectronvolt inelastic X-ray scattering at the HED end-station at the European XFEL[44], following the proof of principle of McBride et al. [5]. Incident X-ray pulses at are first monochromatised using a succession of two double-bounce silicon monochromators arranged in a dispersive configuration. Monochromatised X-ray pulses are then incident on a diamond sample oriented such that the scattering vector is parallel to the [100] crystallographic direction of diamond. The inset shows a side view of the experimental configuration with the orientation of the different parts. Scattered photons are finally collected by the three diced silicon analysers and finally focused on an ePIX100 detector[48].
Measured energy resolution for the three analysers using 500 m-thick PMMA at room temperature and 250 m-thick at 500 K.
| 74 | 68 | |
| 67 | 59 | |
| 76 | 64 |
The smaller values for at 500 K are attributed to a better alignment of the spectrometer when the heated data were collected. The energy difference between the two samples translate to a error in the measured temperature.
Figure 2Overlay of two raw images corresponding to the collected photons scattered from 500 m-thick PMMA (square) and 250 m-thick diamond at room temperature (bright lines) on all three analysers. The squares show the focused images of each analyser on the detector and were obtained using the non-monochromatised X-ray beam. The brighter regions correspond to the raw data collected on room temperature diamond and was obtained using the monochromatised X-ray beam. The vertical direction on the image corresponds to the energy dispersive direction. One can observe on each square a bright band corresponding to the Stokes line (arrow 1) and a dimmer band under it corresponding to the anti-Stokes line (arrow 2). The horizontal white dashed lines represent the boundaries of the image of the analysers on the ePIX100 detector and correspond to the vertical dark dashed lines in Fig. 3. It should be mentioned that the intensity tails outside the white dashed lines, and clearly visible in the intensity fall off beyond the vertical dashed lines in Fig. 3, are most likely caused by defocusing effects.
Figure 3Inelastic spectra for each analyser on room temperature (100) single crystal diamond (a–c) and resistively heated (100) single crystal diamond to K (d–f) showing normalised counts per shot as a function of energy transfer . Traces on the left, middle and right correspond to data obtained from the left, central and right analysers in Fig. 1. The spectra are fitted using Eq. (1) (solid black line) within the energy range defined by the vertical black dashed lines. Temperature is then measured from the intensity asymmetry between the positive and negative energy sides by the use of the detailed balance principle. The inelastic components for the centre analyser in the cold case are shown in Fig. 2 in the Supplemental Materials.
Values of the free parameters in Eq. (1) obtained from minimisation for the room temperature diamond.
| 94 | 5 | |||
| 85 | 7.8 | |||
| 97 | 4.7 |
Values of the free parameters in Eq. (1) obtained from minimisation for the resistively heated diamond spectra.
| 81 | 4.3 | |||
| 64 | 8.4 | |||
| 83 | 9.3 |
Comparison between the experimental temperature measured using the principle of detailed balance and the reading from the thermocouple used to control the temperature of the sample holder with a resistive heater.
| Thermocouple (K) | Experimental data (K) | Thermocouple (K) | Experimental data (K) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
The uncertainty corresponds to the level from the fit of the data, assuming normally distributed residuals. The error for the thermocouple corresponds to the uncertainty on the temperature measurement using a type K thermocouple for the cold case while it corresponds to the maximum of the previous uncertainty and the temperature fluctuations from the PID controller in the heated case.
Figure 4Measurement of the dispersion curve of single crystal (100) diamond. Open squares, circles, and diamonds correspond to data collected on the central, left and right analysers, respectively. Blue symbols correspond to room temperature data, and red symbols to the high-temperature data extracted from Fig. 3(a–f). The uncertainty along the momentum axis is arising from the finite dimension of the analyser which causes a distribution of scattering angles to be collected. Our measurements are compared with inelastic neutron and inelastic X-ray scattering data[52–54]. The dashed and dot-dashed lines correspond to neutron measurements along the [100] and [110] directions, respectively. X-ray scattering data are reported as the closed squares[53] and closed diamonds[54]. The longitudinal and transverse modes are labelled as LA and TA.
Figure 5Schematic of the heater assembly used for the measurements at K during the experiment at the high energy density end-station at the European XFEL, Hamburg, Germany.