Design and characterization of a magnetic bottle electron spectrometer for time-resolved extreme UV and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy of liquid microjets.
Naoya KurahashiStephan ThürmerSuet Yi LiuYo-Ichi YamamotoShutaro KarashimaAtanu BhattacharyaYoshihiro OgiTakuya HorioToshinori SuzukiPublished in: Structural dynamics (Melville, N.Y.) (2021)
We describe a magnetic bottle time-of-flight electron spectrometer designed for time-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of a liquid microjet using extreme UV and X-ray radiation. The spectrometer can be easily reconfigured depending on experimental requirements and the energy range of interest. To improve the energy resolution at high electron kinetic energy, a retarding potential can be applied either via a stack of electrodes or retarding mesh grids, and a flight-tube extension can be attached to increase the flight time. A gated electron detector was developed to reject intense parasitic signal from light scattered off the surface of the cylindrically shaped liquid microjet. This detector features a two-stage multiplication with a microchannel plate plus a fast-response scintillator followed by an image-intensified photon detector. The performance of the spectrometer was tested at SPring-8 and SACLA, and time-resolved photoelectron spectra were measured for an ultrafast charge transfer to solvent reaction in an aqueous NaI solution with a 200 nm UV pump pulses from a table-top ultrafast laser and the 5.5 keV hard X-ray probe pulses from SACLA.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- ionic liquid
- electron transfer
- solar cells
- electron microscopy
- dual energy
- mass spectrometry
- high speed
- image quality
- climate change
- single molecule
- molecularly imprinted
- living cells
- tandem mass spectrometry
- monte carlo
- photodynamic therapy
- computed tomography
- aqueous solution
- magnetic resonance
- quantum dots
- gold nanoparticles
- carbon nanotubes