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Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope

Efforts to understand matter at ever-increasing spatial and temporal resolutions have led to the development of instruments such as the ultrafast transmission electron microscope (UEM) that can capture transient processes with combined nanometer and picosecond resolutions. However, analysis by UEM i...

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Autores principales: Ji, Shaozheng, Piazza, Luca, Cao, Gaolong, Park, Sang Tae, Reed, Bryan W., Masiel, Daniel J., Weissenrieder, Jonas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Crystallographic Association 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5515673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28781982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4994004
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author Ji, Shaozheng
Piazza, Luca
Cao, Gaolong
Park, Sang Tae
Reed, Bryan W.
Masiel, Daniel J.
Weissenrieder, Jonas
author_facet Ji, Shaozheng
Piazza, Luca
Cao, Gaolong
Park, Sang Tae
Reed, Bryan W.
Masiel, Daniel J.
Weissenrieder, Jonas
author_sort Ji, Shaozheng
collection PubMed
description Efforts to understand matter at ever-increasing spatial and temporal resolutions have led to the development of instruments such as the ultrafast transmission electron microscope (UEM) that can capture transient processes with combined nanometer and picosecond resolutions. However, analysis by UEM is often associated with extended acquisition times, mainly due to the limitations of the electron gun. Improvements are hampered by tradeoffs in realizing combinations of the conflicting objectives for source size, emittance, and energy and temporal dispersion. Fundamentally, the performance of the gun is a function of the cathode material, the gun and cathode geometry, and the local fields. Especially shank emission from a truncated tip cathode results in severe broadening effects and therefore such electrons must be filtered by applying a Wehnelt bias. Here we study the influence of the cathode geometry and the Wehnelt bias on the performance of a photoelectron gun in a thermionic configuration. We combine experimental analysis with finite element simulations tracing the paths of individual photoelectrons in the relevant 3D geometry. Specifically, we compare the performance of guard ring cathodes with no shank emission to conventional truncated tip geometries. We find that a guard ring cathode allows operation at minimum Wehnelt bias and improve the temporal resolution under realistic operation conditions in an UEM. At low bias, the Wehnelt exhibits stronger focus for guard ring than truncated tip cathodes. The increase in temporal spread with bias is mainly a result from a decrease in the accelerating field near the cathode surface. Furthermore, simulations reveal that the temporal dispersion is also influenced by the intrinsic angular distribution in the photoemission process and the initial energy spread. However, a smaller emission spot on the cathode is not a dominant driver for enhancing time resolution. Space charge induced temporal broadening shows a close to linear relation with the number of electrons up to at least 10 000 electrons per pulse. The Wehnelt bias will affect the energy distribution by changing the Rayleigh length, and thus the interaction time, at the crossover.
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spelling pubmed-55156732017-08-04 Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope Ji, Shaozheng Piazza, Luca Cao, Gaolong Park, Sang Tae Reed, Bryan W. Masiel, Daniel J. Weissenrieder, Jonas Struct Dyn ARTICLES Efforts to understand matter at ever-increasing spatial and temporal resolutions have led to the development of instruments such as the ultrafast transmission electron microscope (UEM) that can capture transient processes with combined nanometer and picosecond resolutions. However, analysis by UEM is often associated with extended acquisition times, mainly due to the limitations of the electron gun. Improvements are hampered by tradeoffs in realizing combinations of the conflicting objectives for source size, emittance, and energy and temporal dispersion. Fundamentally, the performance of the gun is a function of the cathode material, the gun and cathode geometry, and the local fields. Especially shank emission from a truncated tip cathode results in severe broadening effects and therefore such electrons must be filtered by applying a Wehnelt bias. Here we study the influence of the cathode geometry and the Wehnelt bias on the performance of a photoelectron gun in a thermionic configuration. We combine experimental analysis with finite element simulations tracing the paths of individual photoelectrons in the relevant 3D geometry. Specifically, we compare the performance of guard ring cathodes with no shank emission to conventional truncated tip geometries. We find that a guard ring cathode allows operation at minimum Wehnelt bias and improve the temporal resolution under realistic operation conditions in an UEM. At low bias, the Wehnelt exhibits stronger focus for guard ring than truncated tip cathodes. The increase in temporal spread with bias is mainly a result from a decrease in the accelerating field near the cathode surface. Furthermore, simulations reveal that the temporal dispersion is also influenced by the intrinsic angular distribution in the photoemission process and the initial energy spread. However, a smaller emission spot on the cathode is not a dominant driver for enhancing time resolution. Space charge induced temporal broadening shows a close to linear relation with the number of electrons up to at least 10 000 electrons per pulse. The Wehnelt bias will affect the energy distribution by changing the Rayleigh length, and thus the interaction time, at the crossover. American Crystallographic Association 2017-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5515673/ /pubmed/28781982 http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4994004 Text en © 2017 Author(s). 2329-7778/2017/4(5)/054303/18 All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle ARTICLES
Ji, Shaozheng
Piazza, Luca
Cao, Gaolong
Park, Sang Tae
Reed, Bryan W.
Masiel, Daniel J.
Weissenrieder, Jonas
Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title_full Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title_fullStr Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title_full_unstemmed Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title_short Influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
title_sort influence of cathode geometry on electron dynamics in an ultrafast electron microscope
topic ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5515673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28781982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4994004
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