Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Sep 2010)

Single-shot femtosecond x-ray diffraction from randomly oriented ellipsoidal nanoparticles

  • M. J. Bogan,
  • S. Boutet,
  • A. Barty,
  • W. H. Benner,
  • M. Frank,
  • L. Lomb,
  • R. Shoeman,
  • D. Starodub,
  • M. M. Seibert,
  • S. P. Hau-Riege,
  • B. Woods,
  • P. Decorwin-Martin,
  • S. Bajt,
  • J. Schulz,
  • U. Rohner,
  • B. Iwan,
  • N. Timneanu,
  • S. Marchesini,
  • I. Schlichting,
  • J. Hajdu,
  • H. N. Chapman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.13.094701
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 094701

Abstract

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Coherent diffractive imaging of single particles using the single-shot “diffract and destroy” approach with an x-ray free electron laser (FEL) was recently demonstrated. A high-resolution low-noise coherent diffraction pattern, representative of the object before it turns into a plasma and explodes, results from the interaction of the FEL with the particle. Iterative phase retrieval algorithms are used to reconstruct two-dimensional projection images of the object from the recorded intensities alone. Here we describe the first single-shot diffraction data set that mimics the data proposed for obtaining 3D structure from identical particles. Ellipsoidal iron oxide nanoparticles (250 nm×50 nm) were aerosolized and injected through an aerodynamic lens stack into a soft x-ray FEL. Particle orientation was not controlled with this injection method. We observed that, at the instant the x-ray pulse interacts with the particle, a snapshot of the particle’s orientation is encoded in the diffraction pattern. The results give credence to one of the technical concepts of imaging individual nanometer and subnanometer-sized objects such as single molecules or larger clusters of molecules using hard x-ray FELs and will be used to help develop robust algorithms for determining particle orientations and 3D structure.