X-ray free-electron laser based dark-field X-ray microscopy: A simulation-based study

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Abstract

Dark-field X-ray microscopy (DFXM) is a nondestructive full-field imaging technique providing three-dimensional mapping of microstructure and local strain fields in deeply embedded crystalline elements. This is achieved by placing an objective lens in the diffracted beam, giving a magnified projection image. So far, the method has been applied with a time resolution of milliseconds to hours. In this work, the feasibility of DFXM at the picosecond time scale using an X-ray free-electron laser source and a pump-probe scheme is considered. Thermomechanical strain-wave simulations are combined with geometrical optics and wavefront propagation optics to simulate DFXM images of phonon dynamics in a diamond single crystal. Using the specifications of the XCS instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source as an example results in simulated DFXM images clearly showing the propagation of a strain wave.

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Holstad, T. S., Ræder, T. M., Carlsen, M., Knudsen, E. B., Dresselhaus-Marais, L., Haldrup, K., … Poulsen, H. F. (2022). X-ray free-electron laser based dark-field X-ray microscopy: A simulation-based study. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 55, 112–121. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576721012760

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