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"Rah, Seungyu"
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High-brightness self-seeded X-ray free-electron laser covering the 3.5 keV to 14.6 keV range
2021
A self-seeded X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) is a promising approach to realize bright, fully coherent free-electron laser (FEL) sources in the hard X-ray domain that have been a long-standing issue with longitudinal coherence remaining challenging. At the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory XFEL, we have demonstrated a hard X-ray self-seeded XFEL with a peak brightness of 3.2 × 1035 photons s–1 mm–2 mrad–2 0.1% bandwidth (BW)–1 at 9.7 keV. The bandwidth (0.19 eV) is about 1/70 times as wide (close to the Fourier transform limit) and the peak spectral brightness is 40 times higher than in self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE), with substantial improvements in the stability of self-seeding and noticeably suppressed pedestal effects. We could reach an excellent self-seeding performance at a photon energy of 3.5 keV (lowest) and 14.6 keV (highest) with the same stability as the 9.7 keV self-seeding. The bandwidth of the 14.6 keV seeded FEL was 0.32 eV, and the peak brightness was 1.3 × 1035 photons s–1 mm–2 mrad–2 0.1%BW–1. We show that the use of seeded FEL pulses with higher reproducibility and a cleaner spectrum results in serial femtosecond crystallography data of superior quality compared with data collected using SASE mode.A hard X-ray self-seeded X-ray free-electron laser at the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory provides X-ray pulses with peak brightness of 3.2 × 1035 photons s–1 mm–2 mrad–2 0.1%BW–1 at 9.7 keV and a very small shot-to-shot electron energy jitter of 0.012%.
Journal Article
Hard X-ray free-electron laser with femtosecond-scale timing jitter
by
Kim, Changbum
,
Jung, Young Gyu
,
Park, Yong Jung
in
639/624/1020/1087
,
639/624/1020/1095
,
Acceleration
2017
The hard X-ray free-electron laser at the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory (PAL-XFEL) in the Republic of Korea achieved saturation of a 0.144 nm free-electron laser beam on 27 November 2016, making it the third hard X-ray free-electron laser in the world, following the demonstrations of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) and the SPring-8 Angstrom Compact Free Electron Laser (SACLA). The use of electron-beam-based alignment incorporating undulator radiation spectrum analysis has allowed reliable operation of PAL-XFEL with unprecedented temporal stability and dispersion-free orbits. In particular, a timing jitter of just 20 fs for the free-electron laser photon beam is consistently achieved due to the use of a state-of-the-art design of the electron linear accelerator and electron-beam-based alignment. The low timing jitter of the electron beam makes it possible to observe Bi(111) phonon dynamics without the need for timing-jitter correction, indicating that PAL-XFEL will be an extremely useful tool for hard X-ray time-resolved experiments.
The Pohang Accelerator Laboratory X-ray Free Electron Laser (PAL-XFEL) in South Korea has now entered operation with a timing jitter of just 20 fs.
Journal Article
Time-resolved resonant elastic soft X-ray scattering at Pohang Accelerator Laboratory X-ray Free Electron Laser
by
Kim, Changbum
,
Eom, Intae
,
Kim, Hyeong-Do
in
Charge density waves
,
Electronic systems
,
Free electron lasers
2020
Resonant elastic X-ray scattering has been widely employed for exploring complex electronic ordering phenomena, like charge, spin, and orbital order, in particular in strongly correlated electronic systems. In addition, recent developments of pump-probe X-ray scattering allow us to expand the investigation of the temporal dynamics of such orders. Here, we introduce a new time-resolved Resonant Soft X-ray Scattering (tr-RSXS) endstation developed at the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory X-ray Free Electron Laser (PAL-XFEL). This endstation has an optical laser (wavelength of 800 nm plus harmonics) as the pump source. Based on the commissioning results, the tr-RSXS at PAL-XFEL can deliver a soft X-ray probe (400-1300 eV) with a time resolution about ~100 fs without jitter correction. As an example, the temporal dynamics of a charge density wave on a high-temperature cuprate superconductor is demonstrated.