Structural Dynamics (Sep 2020)

The TRIXS end-station for femtosecond time-resolved resonant inelastic x-ray scattering experiments at the soft x-ray free-electron laser FLASH

  • S. Dziarzhytski,
  • M. Biednov,
  • B. Dicke,
  • A. Wang,
  • P. S. Miedema,
  • R. Y. Engel,
  • J. O. Schunck,
  • H. Redlin,
  • H. Weigelt,
  • F. Siewert,
  • C. Behrens,
  • M. Sinha,
  • A. Schulte,
  • B. Grimm-Lebsanft,
  • S. G. Chiuzbăian,
  • W. Wurth,
  • M. Beye,
  • M. Rübhausen,
  • G. Brenner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/4.0000029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
pp. 054301 – 054301-12

Abstract

Read online

We present the experimental end-station TRIXS dedicated to time-resolved soft x-ray resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) experiments on solid samples at the free-electron laser FLASH. Using monochromatized ultrashort femtosecond XUV/soft x-ray photon pulses in combination with a synchronized optical laser in a pump-probe scheme, the TRIXS setup allows measuring sub-picosecond time-resolved high-resolution RIXS spectra in the energy range from 35 eV to 210 eV, thus spanning the M-edge (M1 and M2,3) absorption resonances of 3d transition metals and N4,5-edges of rare earth elements. A Kirkpatrick–Baez refocusing mirror system at the first branch of the plane grating monochromator beamline (PG1) provides a focus of (6 × 6) μm2 (FWHM) at the sample. The RIXS spectrometer reaches an energy resolution of 35–160 meV over the entire spectral range. The optical laser system based on a chirped pulse optical parametric amplifier provides approximately 100 fs (FWHM) long photon pulses at the fundamental wavelength of 800 nm and a fluence of 120 mJ/cm2 at a sample for optical pump-XUV probe measurements. Furthermore, optical frequency conversion enables experiments at 400 nm or 267 nm with a fluence of 80 and 30 mJ/cm2, respectively. Some of the first (pump-probe) RIXS spectra measured with this setup are shown. The measured time resolution for time-resolved RIXS measurements has been characterized as 287 fs (FWHM) for the used energy resolution.