Femtosecond time-resolved MeV electron diffraction

Abstract

We report the experimental demonstration of femtosecond electron diffraction using high-brightness MeV electron beams. High-quality, single-shot electron diffraction patterns for both polycrystalline aluminum and single-crystal 1T-TaS2 are obtained utilizing a 5 fC (~3 × 104 electrons) pulse of electrons at 2.8 MeV. The high quality of the electron diffraction patterns confirms that electron beam has a normalized emittance of ~50 nm rad. The transverse and longitudinal coherence length is ~11 and ~2.5 nm, respectively. The timing jitter between the pump laser and probe electron beam was found to be ~100 fs (rms). The temporal resolution is demonstrated by observing the evolution of Bragg and superlattice peaks of 1T-TaS2 following an 800 nm optical pump and was found to be 130 fs. Our results demonstrate the advantages of MeV electrons, including large elastic differential scattering cross-section and access to high-order reflections, and the feasibility of ultimately realizing below 10 fs time-resolved electron diffraction.

Description
Keywords
Ultrafast electron diffraction, high-brightness electron beam, coherent length, ultrafast electron imaging
Citation
Zhu, P., Zhu, Y., Hidaka, Y., Wu, L., Cao, J., Berger, H., et al. (2015). Femtosecond time-resolved MeV electron diffraction. 17(6). https://doi.org//10.1088/1367-2630/17/6/063004
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License
CC BY 3.0 Unported