Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

Non-linear enhancement of ultrafast X-ray diffraction through transient resonances

  • Stephan Kuschel,
  • Phay J. Ho,
  • Andre Al Haddad,
  • Felix F. Zimmermann,
  • Leonie Flueckiger,
  • Matthew R. Ware,
  • Joseph Duris,
  • James P. MacArthur,
  • Alberto Lutman,
  • Ming-Fu Lin,
  • Xiang Li,
  • Kazutaka Nakahara,
  • Jeff W. Aldrich,
  • Peter Walter,
  • Linda Young,
  • Christoph Bostedt,
  • Agostino Marinelli,
  • Tais Gorkhover

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56046-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Diffraction-before-destruction imaging with ultrashort X-ray pulses can visualize non-equilibrium processes, such as chemical reactions, with sub-femtosecond precision in the native environment. Here, a nanospecimen diffracts a single X-ray flash before it disintegrates. The sample structure can be reconstructed from the coherent diffraction image (CDI). State-of-the-art X-ray snapshots lack high spatial resolution because of weak diffraction signal. Bleaching effects from photo-ionization significantly restrain image brightness scaling. We find that non-linear transient ion resonances can overcome this barrier if X-ray laser pulses are shorter than in most experiments. We compared snapshots from individual ≈ 100 nm Xe nanoparticles as a function of pulse duration and incoming X-ray fluence. Our experimental results and Monte Carlo simulations suggest that transient resonances can increase ionic scattering cross sections significantly beyond literature values. This provides a novel avenue towards substantial improvement of the spatial resolution in CDI in combination with sub-femtosecond temporal precision at the nanoscale.