Publication | Open Access
Nanosecond X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy using pulse time structure of a storage-ring source
22
Citations
40
References
2020
Year
X-ray SpectroscopyEngineeringStorage RingMicroscopyComplex SystemsSynchrotron Radiation SourceX-ray FluorescenceX-ray ImagingOptical PropertiesPulse Time StructureBiophysicsStorage-ring SourcePhotonicsPhysicsSynchrotron RadiationX-ray Free-electron LaserSpectroscopyX-ray DiffractionApplied PhysicsCorrelation FunctionsMedicine
X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) is a routine technique to study slow dynamics in complex systems at storage-ring sources. Achieving nanosecond time resolution with the conventional XPCS technique is, however, still an experimentally challenging task requiring fast detectors and sufficient photon flux. Here, the result of a nanosecond XPCS study of fast colloidal dynamics is shown by employing an adaptive gain integrating pixel detector (AGIPD) operated at frame rates of the intrinsic pulse structure of the storage ring. Correlation functions from single-pulse speckle patterns with the shortest correlation time of 192 ns have been calculated. These studies provide an important step towards routine fast XPCS studies at storage rings.
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