Abstract

Split-pulse x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy has been proposed as one of the unique capabilities made possible with x-ray free electron lasers. It enables characterization of atomic-scale structural dynamics that dictates the macroscopic properties of various disordered material systems. Central to the experimental concept are x-ray optics that are capable of splitting an individual coherent femtosecond x-ray pulse into two distinct pulses, introduce an adjustable time delay between them, and then recombine the two pulses at the sample position such that they generate two coherent scattering patterns in rapid succession. Recent developments in such optics showed that, while true “amplitude-splitting” optics at hard x-ray wavelengths remains a technical challenge, wavefront and wavelength splitting are both feasible, able to deliver two micron-sized focused beams to the sample with sufficient relative stability. Here we show, however, that the conventional approach to speckle visibility spectroscopy using these beam-splitting techniques can be problematic, even leading to a decoupling of speckle visibility and material dynamics. In response, we discuss the details of the experimental approaches and data analysis protocols for addressing issues caused by subtle beam dissimilarities for both wavefront- and wavelength-splitting setups. We also show that in some scattering geometries, the Q-space mismatch can be resolved by using two beams of slightly different incidence angles and slightly different wavelengths at the same time. Instead of measuring the visibility of weak speckle patterns, the time correlation in sample structure is encoded in the “side band” of the spatial autocorrelation of the summed speckle patterns and can be retrieved straightforwardly from the experimental data. We demonstrate this with a numerical simulation.3 MoreReceived 18 December 2019Accepted 30 March 2020DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.023099Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI.Published by the American Physical SocietyPhysics Subject Headings (PhySH)Research AreasX-ray beams & opticsAtomic, Molecular & Optical

Highlights

  • Fully transversely coherent femtosecond x-ray pulses produced by x-ray free electron laser (FEL) sources opened up the possibilities of direct measurement of atomicscale dynamics of complex systems at their native timescales [1]

  • A primary methodology with the potential to extend dynamic light scattering to angstrom lengthscales and femto-/picosecond timescales is the so-called split-pulse xray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) technique, where the dynamics of the scattering object are imprinted onto the fluctuations of coherent scattering intensity distribution [5]

  • This is the case for most current systems being deployed at the x-ray FEL facilities

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Fully transversely coherent femtosecond x-ray pulses produced by x-ray free electron laser (FEL) sources opened up the possibilities of direct measurement of atomicscale dynamics of complex systems at their native timescales [1]. While area detectors capable of independently measuring the scattering patterns from two subsequent x-ray pulses with a femto- to picosecond separation will not be available in the foreseeable future, it was proposed that the correlations between the coherent scattering patterns from the two successive pulses can be obtained from the summed scattering pattern by analyzing the speckle visibility [6]. We present detailed examinations of the speckle correlation analysis in these scenarios and illustrate the incompatibility of the wavefrontand wavelength-splitting optical schemes with the speckle visibility spectroscopy concept. We propose an alternative correlation extraction methodology, as well as a Q-space compensation solution by using two different wavelengths, that allows the extraction of dynamics under the general experimental scheme of two-pulse XPCS.

SPLIT-PULSE SCATTERING GEOMETRY
WAVEFRONT-SPLITTING CASE
Compensation of the out-of-detector-plane mismatch
Treatment for in-detector-plane mismatch
SIMULATION OF THE SOLUTION
Mitigation with long beamline
Impact of source fluctuations
High-speed signal processing with photon coincidence measurements
VIII. CONCLUSION
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