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Femtosecond gas-phase mega-electron-volt ultrafast electron diffraction
Author(s) -
Xiaozhe Shen,
J. Pedro F. Nunes,
Jie Yang,
R.K. Jobe,
Renkai Li,
MingFu Lin,
B. Moore,
Mario Niebuhr,
Stephen Weathersby,
Thomas Wolf,
Charles Yoneda,
Markus Guehr,
Martin Centurion,
Xijie Wang
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
structural dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.415
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2329-7778
DOI - 10.1063/1.5120864
Subject(s) - femtosecond , electron diffraction , electron , diffraction , ultrashort pulse , mega , ultrafast electron diffraction , phase (matter) , materials science , reflection high energy electron diffraction , atomic physics , chemistry , physics , optics , nuclear physics , laser , organic chemistry , astronomy
The development of ultrafast gas electron diffraction with nonrelativistic electrons has enabled the determination of molecular structures with atomic spatial resolution. It has, however, been challenging to break the picosecond temporal resolution barrier and achieve the goal that has long been envisioned—making space- and-time resolved molecular movies of chemical reaction in the gas-phase. Recently, an ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) apparatus using mega-electron-volt (MeV) electrons was developed at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory for imaging ultrafast structural dynamics of molecules in the gas phase. The SLAC gas-phase MeV UED has achieved 65 fs root mean square temporal resolution, 0.63 Å spatial resolution, and 0.22 Å −1 reciprocal-space resolution. Such high spatial-temporal resolution has enabled the capturing of real-time molecular movies of fundamental photochemical mechanisms, such as chemical bond breaking, ring opening, and a nuclear wave packet crossing a conical intersection. In this paper, the design that enables the high spatial-temporal resolution of the SLAC gas phase MeV UED is presented. The compact design of the differential pump section of the SLAC gas phase MeV UED realized five orders-of-magnitude vacuum isolation between the electron source and gas sample chamber. The spatial resolution, temporal resolution, and long-term stability of the apparatus are systematically characterized.

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