The Boersch effect in a picosecond pulsed electron beam emitted from a semiconductor photocathode

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Abstract

The space charge effect has been clearly observed in the energy distributions of picosecond pulse beams from a spin-polarized electron microscope, and was found to depend upon the quantity of charge per pulse. The non-linear phenomena associated with this effect have also been replicated in beam simulations that take into account of a three-dimensional space charge. The results show that a charge of 500 aC/pulse provides the highest brightness with a 16-ps pulse duration, a 30-keV beam energy, and an emission spot of 1.8 μm. Furthermore, the degeneracy of the wave packet of the pulsed electron beam has been evaluated to be 1.6 × 10-5 with a charge of 100 aC/pulse, which is higher than that for a continuously emitted electron beam despite the low beam energy of 30 keV. The high degeneracy and high brightness contribute to the realization of high temporal and energy resolutions in low-voltage electron microscopy, which will serve to reduce radiolysis damage and enhance scattering contrast.

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Kuwahara, M., Nambo, Y., Aoki, K., Sameshima, K., Jin, X., Ujihara, T., … Tanaka, N. (2016). The Boersch effect in a picosecond pulsed electron beam emitted from a semiconductor photocathode. Applied Physics Letters, 109(1). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4955457

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