Ultrafast electron diffraction (UED), also known as femtosecond electron diffraction (FED), is a pump-probe experimental method based on the combination of optical pump-probe spectroscopy and
electron diffraction
Electron diffraction refers to the bending of electron beams around atomic structures. This behaviour, typical for Wave (physics), waves, is applicable to electrons due to the wave–particle duality stating that electrons behave as both particle ...
. UED provides information on the dynamical changes of the structure of materials. It is very similar to
time resolved crystallography, but instead of using X-rays as the probe, it uses electrons. In the UED technique, a femtosecond (fs) laser optical pulse excites (pumps) a sample into an excited, usually non-equilibrium, state. The pump pulse may induce chemical, electronic or structural transitions. After a finite time interval, a fs electron pulse is incident upon the sample. The electron pulse undergoes diffraction as a result of interacting with the sample. The diffraction signal is, subsequently, detected by an electron counting instrument such as a CCD camera. Specifically, after the electron pulse diffracts from the sample, the scattered electrons will form a diffraction pattern (image) on a CCD camera. This pattern contains structural information about the sample. By adjusting the time difference between the arrival (at the sample) of the pump and probe beams, one can obtain a series of diffraction patterns as a function of the various time differences. The diffraction data series can be concatenated in order to produce a motion picture of the changes that occurred in the data. UED can provide a wealth of dynamics on charge carriers, atoms, and molecules.
History
The design of early ultrafast electron diffraction instruments was based on x-ray streak cameras, the first reported UED experiment demonstrating an electron pulse length of 100 ps.
Electron Pulse Production
The electron pulses are typically produced by the process of photoemission in which a fs optical pulse is directed toward a
photocathode
A photocathode is a surface engineered to convert light ( photons) into electrons using the photoelectric effect. Photocathodes are important in accelerator physics where they are utilised in a photoinjector to generate high brightness electron b ...
.
If the incident laser pulse has an appropriate energy, electrons will be ejected from the photocathode through a process known as photoemission. The electrons are subsequently accelerated to high energies, ranging from tens of kiloelectron-volts
to several megaelectron-volts,
using an
electron gun
An electron gun (also called electron emitter) is an electrical component in some vacuum tubes that produces a narrow, collimated electron beam that has a precise kinetic energy. The largest use is in cathode-ray tubes (CRTs), used in nearl ...
.
Electron Pulse Compression
Generally, two methods are used in order to compress electron pulses in order to overcome pulsewidth expansion due to Coulomb repulsion. Generating high-flux ultrashort electron beams has been relatively straightforward, but pulse duration below a picosecond proved extremely difficult due to space-charge effects. Space-charge interactions increase in severity with bunch charge and rapidly act to broaden the pulse duration, which has resulted in an apparently unavoidable trade-off between signal (bunch charge) and time-resolution in ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) experiments. Radio-frequency (RF) compression has emerged has an leading method of reducing the pulse expansion in UED experiments, achieving temporal resolution well below 50 femtoseconds.
Shorter electron beams below 10 femtoseconds are ultimately required to probe the fastest dynamics
in solid state materials and observe gas phase molecular reactions.
Single shot

For studying irreversible process, a diffraction signal is obtained from a single electron bunch containing
or more particles.
Stroboscopic
When studying reversible process, especially weak signals caused by, e.g., thermal diffuse scattering, a diffraction pattern is accumulated from many electron bunches, as many as
.
Resolution
The resolution of an ultrafast electron diffraction apparatus can be characterized both in space and in time. Spatial resolution comes in two distinct parts: real space and
reciprocal space
In physics, the reciprocal lattice represents the Fourier transform of another lattice (usually a Bravais lattice). In normal usage, the initial lattice (whose transform is represented by the reciprocal lattice) is usually a periodic spatial fu ...
. Real space resolution is determined by the physical size of the electron probe on the sample. A smaller physical probe size can allow experiments on crystals that cannot feasibly be grown in large sizes.
High reciprocal space resolution allows for the detection of
Bragg diffraction
In physics and chemistry , Bragg's law, Wulff–Bragg's condition or Laue–Bragg interference, a special case of Laue diffraction, gives the angles for coherent scattering of waves from a crystal lattice. It encompasses the superposition of wav ...
spots that correspond to long periodicity phenomena. It can be calculated with the following equation:
:
,
where is the reciprocal space resolution, is the
Compton wavelength
The Compton wavelength is a quantum mechanical property of a particle. The Compton wavelength of a particle is equal to the wavelength of a photon whose energy is the same as the rest energy of that particle (see mass–energy equivalence). It wa ...
of the electrons, is the normalized
emittance
Emittance may refer to:
*Beam emittance
In accelerator physics, emittance is a property of a charged particle beam. It refers to the area occupied by the beam in a position-and-momentum phase space.
Each particle in a beam can be described by ...
of the electrons, and is the size of the probe on the sample.
Temporal resolution is primarily a function of the bunch length of the electrons and the relative timing jitters between the pump and probe.
Detectors
See also
*
Ahmed Zewail
Ahmed Hassan Zewail ( ar, أحمد حسن زويل, ; February 26, 1946 – August 2, 2016) was an Egyptian-American chemist, known as the "father of femtochemistry". He was awarded the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on femtochemistry ...
*
R. J. Dwayne Miller
R. J. Dwayne Miller is a Canadian chemist and a professor at the University of Toronto. His focus is in physical chemistry and biophysics. He is most widely known for his work in ultrafast laser science, time-resolved spectroscopy, and
the ...
*
Time resolved crystallography
References
Sources
*
*
* {{cite journal
, last1=Chatelain , first1=Robert P.
, last2=Morrison , first2=Vance R.
, last3=Godbout , first3=Chris
, last4=Siwick , first4=Bradley J.
, title = Ultrafast electron diffraction with radio-frequency compressed electron pulses
, journal =
Applied Physics Letters
''Applied Physics Letters'' is a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal that is published by the American Institute of Physics. Its focus is rapid publication and dissemination of new experimental and theoretical papers regarding applications ...
, volume=101
, number=8
, pages=081901
, year=2012
, doi=10.1063/1.4747155
, bibcode=2012ApPhL.101h1901C
*
Laser applications
Diffraction