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Time- and energy resolved photoemission electron microscopy-imaging of photoelectron time-of-flight analysis by means of pulsed excitations

Authors :
Oelsner, Andreas
Rohmer, Martin
Schneider, Christian
Bayer, Daniela
Schönhense, Gerd
Aeschlimann, Martin
Source :
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy & Related Phenomena. May2010, Vol. 178-179, p317-330. 14p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract: The present work enlightens the developments in time- and energy resolved photoemission electron microscopy over the past few years. We describe basic principles of the technique and demonstrate different applications. An energy- and time-filtering photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) for real-time spectroscopic imaging can be realized either by a retarding field or hemispherical energy analyzer or by using time-of-flight optics with a delay line detector. The latter method has the advantage of no data loss at all as all randomly incoming particles are measured not only by position but also by time. This is of particular interest for pump–probe experiments in the femtosecond and attosecond time scale where space charge processes drastically limit the maximum number of photoemitted electrons per laser pulse. This work focuses particularly on time-of-flight analysis using a novel delay line detector. Time and energy resolved PEEM instruments with delay line detectors enable 4D imaging (x, y, Δt, E Kin) on a true counting basis. This allows a broad range of applications from real-time observation of dynamic phenomena at surfaces to fs time-of-flight spectro-microscopy and even aberration correction. By now, these time-of-flight analysis instruments achieve intrinsic time resolutions of 108ps absolute and 13.5ps relative. Very high permanent measurement speeds of more than 4 million events per second in random detection regimes have been realized using a standard USB2.0 interface. By means of this performance, the time-resolved PEEM technique enables to display evolutions of spatially resolved (<25nm) and temporal sliced images life on any modern computer. The method allows dynamics investigations of variable electrical, magnetic, and optical near fields at surfaces and great prospects in dynamical adaptive photoelectron optics. For dynamical processes in the ps time scale such as magnetic domain wall movements, the time resolution of the delay line detectors even allows to be used directly for real-time experiments as well. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03682048
Volume :
178-179
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy & Related Phenomena
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
50353619
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2009.10.008