Musumeci P, Moody J T, Scoby C M
UCLA Department of Physics and Astronomy, 475 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1547, USA.
Ultramicroscopy. 2008 Oct;108(11):1450-3. doi: 10.1016/j.ultramic.2008.03.011. Epub 2008 Jun 14.
Electron diffraction holds the promise to yield real-time resolution of atomic motion in an easily accessible environment like a university laboratory at a fraction of the cost of fourth-generation X-ray sources. Currently the limit in time-resolution for conventional electron diffraction is set by how short an electron pulse can be made. A very promising solution to maintain the highest possible beam intensity without excessive pulse broadening from space charge effects is to increase the electron energy to the MeV level where relativistic effects significantly reduce the space charge forces. Rf photoinjectors can in principle deliver up to 10(7)-10(8) electrons packed in bunches of approximately 100-fs length, allowing an unprecedented time resolution and enabling the study of irreversible phenomena by single-shot diffraction patterns. The use of rf photoinjectors as sources for ultrafast electron diffraction has been recently at the center of various theoretical and experimental studies. The UCLA Pegasus laboratory, commissioned in early 2007 as an advanced photoinjector facility, is the only operating system in the country, which has recently demonstrated electron diffraction using a relativistic beam from an rf photoinjector. Due to the use of a state-of-the-art ultrashort photoinjector driver laser system, the beam has been measured to be sub-100-fs long, at least a factor of 5 better than what measured in previous relativistic electron diffraction setups. Moreover, diffraction patterns from various metal targets (titanium and aluminum) have been obtained using the Pegasus beam. One of the main laboratory goals in the near future is to fully develop the rf photoinjector-based ultrafast electron diffraction technique with particular attention to the optimization of the working point of the photoinjector in a low-charge ultrashort pulse regime, and to the development of suitable beam diagnostics.
电子衍射有望在诸如大学实验室这样易于进入的环境中,以仅为第四代X射线源成本一小部分的代价,实现对原子运动的实时分辨率。目前,传统电子衍射的时间分辨率极限取决于电子脉冲能做多短。一个非常有前景的解决方案是将电子能量提高到兆电子伏特水平,在这个水平相对论效应会显著降低空间电荷力,从而在不过度因空间电荷效应导致脉冲展宽的情况下维持尽可能高的束流强度。射频光注入器原则上可以提供多达10(7)-10(8)个电子,这些电子聚集成长度约为100飞秒的束团,这使得能够实现前所未有的时间分辨率,并通过单次衍射图样研究不可逆现象。将射频光注入器用作超快电子衍射源最近一直是各种理论和实验研究的核心。加州大学洛杉矶分校的珀加索斯实验室于2007年初作为一个先进的光注入器设施投入使用,是该国唯一运行的系统,该实验室最近展示了使用来自射频光注入器的相对论束流进行电子衍射。由于使用了最先进的超短光注入器驱动激光系统,已测得束流长度小于100飞秒,比之前相对论电子衍射装置中的测量结果至少好5倍。此外,还使用珀加索斯束流获得了来自各种金属靶(钛和铝)的衍射图样。在不久的将来,该实验室的主要目标之一是全面开发基于射频光注入器的超快电子衍射技术,特别关注在低电荷超短脉冲模式下光注入器工作点的优化以及合适的束流诊断技术的开发。