Publication | Open Access
Photoelectron Diffraction Imaging of a Molecular Breakup Using an X-Ray Free-Electron Laser
51
Citations
24
References
2020
Year
A central motivation for the development of x-ray free-electron lasers has been the prospect of timeresolved single-molecule imaging with atomic resolution. Here, we show that x-ray photoelectron diffraction-where a photoelectron emitted after x-ray absorption illuminates the molecular structure from within-can be used to image the increase of the internuclear distance during the x-ray-induced fragmentation of an O 2 molecule. By measuring the molecular-frame photoelectron emission patterns for a two-photon sequential K-shell ionization in coincidence with the fragment ions, and by sorting the data as a function of the measured kinetic energy release, we can resolve the elongation of the molecular bond by approximately 1.2 a.u. within the duration of the x-ray pulse. The experiment paves the road toward timeresolved pump-probe photoelectron diffraction imaging at high-repetition-rate x-ray free-electron lasers.
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