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Phys. Rev. A 83, 033402 (2011) [11 pages]

Impact of hollow-atom formation on coherent x-ray scattering at high intensity

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Sang-Kil Son (손상길)1,*, Linda Young2,†, and Robin Santra1,3,‡
1Center for Free-Electron Laser Science, DESY, 22607 Hamburg, Germany
2Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Illinois 60439, USA
3Department of Physics, University of Hamburg, 20355 Hamburg, Germany

See Also: Erratum

Received 3 December 2010; published 8 March 2011

X-ray free-electron lasers (FELs) are promising tools for structural determination of macromolecules via coherent x-ray scattering. During ultrashort and ultraintense x-ray pulses with an atomic-scale wavelength, samples are subject to radiation damage and possibly become highly ionized, which may influence the quality of x-ray scattering patterns. We develop a toolkit to treat detailed ionization, relaxation, and scattering dynamics for an atom within a consistent theoretical framework. The coherent x-ray scattering problem including radiation damage is investigated as a function of x-ray FEL parameters such as pulse length, fluence, and photon energy. We find that the x-ray scattering intensity saturates at a fluence of ~107 photon/Å2 per pulse but can be maximized by using a pulse duration much shorter than the time scales involved in the relaxation of the inner-shell vacancy states created. Under these conditions, both inner-shell electrons in a carbon atom are removed, and the resulting hollow atom gives rise to a scattering pattern with little loss of quality for a spatial resolution >1 Å. Our numerical results predict that in order to scatter from a carbon atom 0.1 photon per x-ray pulse, within a spatial resolution of 1.7 Å, a fluence of 1×107 photons/Å2 per pulse is required at a pulse length of 1 fs and a photon energy of 12 keV. By using a pulse length of a few hundred attoseconds, one can suppress even secondary ionization processes in extended systems. The present results suggest that high-brightness attosecond x-ray FELs would be ideal for single-shot imaging of individual macromolecules.

©2011 American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.83.033402
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.83.033402
PACS:
32.80.Fb, 32.90.+a, 87.59.-e, 87.15.ag

*sangkil.son@cfel.de

young@anl.gov

robin.santra@cfel.de

See Also

Erratum: Sang-Kil Son (손상길), Linda Young, and Robin Santra, Erratum: Impact of hollow-atom formation on coherent x-ray scattering at high intensity [Phys. Rev. A 83, 033402 (2011)], Phys. Rev. A 83, 069906 (2011).