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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

IR/UV Double-Resonance Spectroscopy of Reactive Hydrocarbon Species and their Reaction Products in Cold Molecular Jets / IR/UV Doppelresonanz-Spektroskopie von Reaktiven Kohlenwasserstoffspezies und ihren Reaktionsprodukten in kalten Molekularstrahlen

Hirsch, Florian January 2021 (has links) (PDF)
Reactive hydrocarbon species are important in a multitude of different scientific areas. In this thesis, the vibrational spectra of hydrocarbon radicals, biradicals and their reaction product have been studied in a gas-phase environment. The specific molecules investigated here, are of particular importance in the field of combustion and astrochemistry. They were produced from suitable precursors in a pyrolytically heated micro-reactor and subsequently seeded in an appropriate carrier gas. As methodology, IR/UV ion dip spectroscopy has been utilized, which delivers massselected gas-phase IR spectra of all ionizable species detectable in the molecular beam. These, with the help of DFT calculations, allow for determination of the fingerprint IR spectra, identification of mass carriers and formulation of potential reaction mechanisms. All studies have been conducted in collaboration with the group of Prof. Dr. Anouk M. Rjis and the necessary potent IR radiation has been provided by the free-electron laser FELIX. Thus, the IR/UV measurements have been executed at the FELIX Laboratory of the Radboud University in Nijmegen. The first study presented in this thesis is the investigation of ortho-benzyne in Chapter 3.1. This molecule is of particular interest due to its uncommon electronic structure and its role in high-temperature reactions. Although, the infrared spectrum of o-C6H4 was not accessible, a number of reaction products were identified via their fingerprint spectra. Masses in the range from 78 - 228 were assigned to their respective carrier. The identified species include typical PAHs like naphthalene, phenanthrene, up to triphenylene. The identified masses further suggest a PAH growth heavily influenced by diradical 1,4-cycloaddition followed by fragmentation, as well as by classical HACA- and PAC-like mechanisms. These results were augmented by threshold photoionization measurements from Engelbert Reusch, who identified lighter reaction products, which have insufficient IR absorption or unsuitable ionization characteristics to be identified in the IR/UV experiment. An interesting observation is the identification of m/z = 152. This carrier has been assigned differently by the IR and TPES experiments. Whereas the IR spectrum clearly identifies the species as 2-ethynylnaphthalene, the TPES evidently is in great agreement with biphenylene. This is a good example how different experimental methodologies can benefit from each other to gain a deeper insight into the actual science of a particular system. Probably, the prime example for an aromatically resonance stabilized radical is benzyl. This radical is of high importance for many combustion studies, as it represents the primary high-temperature decomposition product of toluene. The goal of the study was the identification of the benzyl self reaction products and the results are discussed in Section 3.2. The radical was pyrolytically produced by its respective nitrite precursor. The mass spectrum showed that the benzyl self reaction formed two products with C11 and three with C14 constitution. All mass peaks were evenly spaced by two mass units, respectively, which suggests a close relation in formation. Indeed, the C11 products were identified as diphenylmethane and fluorene, which are simply connected via cyclization. The heaviest product was identified as phenanthrene, which is formed via the cyclization of bibenzyl to 9,10-dihydrophenanthrene and subsequent elimination of hydrogen. This result was quiet interesting as the intermediate of this reaction was often assumed to be stilbene, which was not observed in the study. Hence, the reaction seems to undergo cyclization first before phenanthrene is finally formed via hydrogen elimination. Expanding the molecular frame of benzyl by an additional methyl group leads to the xylyl radicals and its decomposition product the xylylenes. Also important in combustion research, xylyl radicals represent the preferred decomposition products of xylene, a frequently used anti-knock agent in modern gasoline blends. After further hydrogen elimination the xylyl radicals can then form their respective xylylenes. The results of the xylyl experiments are discussed in Section 3.3. Here the gas-phase vibrational spectrum in the fingerprint region for all three isomers has been recorded for the first time in isolation. Although, all isomers have a very similar structure and symmetry, and consequently similar vibrational bands, the resolution of the experimental data was exceedingly sufficient for a clear assignment. Additionally, the dimerization products of meta- and para-xylyl could also be identified. A similar approach was taken to determine the fingerprint spectra for the xylylenes. Here, only para-xylylene could be unambiguously identified as the carrier of mass 104. For both ortho- and meta-xylylene precursors, only isomerization products were observed as the carriers of mass 104; benzocyclobutene and styrene, respectively. A possible explanation is elaborated upon in the troubleshooting Sec- tion 3.4.3.5. In the final experimental section a study on the decomposition of phthalide is presented. The objective of this experiment was mainly focused around the formation of C7 species, particularly the fulvenallenyl radical C7H5. In fact, the first experimental fingerprint spectrum of isolated C7H5 in the gas-phase was measured and is displayed in Fig. 3.45. Furthermore, the experiment demonstrates that the pyrolysis products of phthalide are excellent soot precursors, as many heavier reaction products have been identified. These include typical PAH species like naphthalene and phenanthrene as well as their methylated isomers. A large number of molecules with terminal ethynyl moieties indicate a strong influence of HACA growth in the experimental environment. However, many formation pathways of products have been discussed, which are formed involving experiment specific species, like C5H5 and C7H5, and often include expansion steps from 5- to 6-membered rings. / Reaktive Kohlenwasserstoffe spielen eine wichtige Rolle in vielen wissenschaftlichen Bereichen. In der vorliegenden Dissertation wurden die schwingungsspektroskopischen Eigenschaften von Kohlenwasserstoffradikalen, Biradikalen und ihren Reaktionsprodukten in der Gasphase untersucht. Die Spezies, die in den Studien dieser Arbeit untersucht wurden, spielen eine besondere Rolle im Bereich der Verbrennungs- und Astrochemie. Sie wurden aus geeigneten Vorläufern pyrolytisch in einem beheizten Mikroreaktor hergestellt und anschließend mit einem passenden Trägergas in die Gasphase überführt. Als spektroskopische Methode wurde IR/UV Ionen-Dip Spektroskopie verwendet. Diese liefert massenselektive Schwingungsspektren von allen in einem Molekularstrahl ionisierbaren und detektierbaren Spezies. Dies erlaubt es, mit Hilfe von DFT Rechnungen die Schwingungsspektren der isolierten Moleküle zu messen, diese zu identifizieren und auch Rückschlüsse auf die Reaktionsmechanismen zu ziehen. Alle Experimente dieser Thesis wurden in Zusammenarbeit mit der Gruppe von Prof. Dr. Anouk M. Rijs durchgeführt. Hierbei wurde als hochbrillante IR-Quelle der Freie-Elektronenlaser FELIX der Radboud University in Nijmegen verwendet. Die erste Studie in Kapitel 3.1 beschäftigte sich mit Untersuchungen des ortho- Benzins. Dieses Molekül ist von besonderer Bedeutung aufgrund seiner ungewöhnlichen elektronischen Struktur und seiner Rolle bei Hochtemperaturreaktionen. Obwohl das IR Spektrum des o-C6H4 nicht ermittelt werden konnte, war es möglich einige Reaktionsprodukte anhand ihrer Schwingungsspektren zu identifizieren. Massensignale im Bereich von 78 - 228 amu wurden hierbei ihren jeweiligen Molekülen zugeordnet. Hierzu zählen typische PAHs wie Naphthalen, Phenanthren, bis zu Triphenylen. Die identifizierten Spezies legten des Weiteren nahe, dass das PAH Wachstum zum größten Teil durch diradikalische 1,4-Cycloaddition mit anschließender Fragmentierung, sowie HACA und PAC Mechanismen dominiert sein dürfte. Diese Ergebnisse wurden mit Photoionisationsstudien von Engelbert Reusch vervollständigt, welcher weitere leichtere Reaktionsprodukte identifizieren konnte, die eine unzureichende IR Absorption oder ungeeignete Ionisationseigenschaften aufweisen. Eine besonders interessante Erkenntnis stellt die Identifizierung von Masse 152 dar. Der Träger dieser Masse wurde durch die IR und TPES Experimente unterschiedlich zugeordnet. Hierbei wurde die Masse durch die Schwingungsspektren der IR/UV Experimente als 2-Ethinylnaphthalen identifiziert. Die TPES Spektren jedoch zeigten eine große Übereinstimmung der experimentellen Daten mit Biphenylen. Somit war diese Studie ein hervorragendes Beispiel dafür, wie unterschiedliche Methoden sich gegenseitig ergänzen können, um einen besseren Einblick in ein bestimmtes System zu erhalten. Benzyl ist womöglich das beste Musterbeispiel für ein aromatisch resonanzstabilisiertes Radikal. Dieses ist von großer Bedeutung in vielen Verbrennungsstudien, da es das primäre hochtemperatur Zerfallsprodukt von Toluol darstellt. Das Ziel dieser Studie war die Identifizierung der Benzyl Selbstreaktionsprodukte und ihre Ergebnisse wurden in Kapitel 3.2 präsentiert. Das Radikal wurde pyrolytisch aus dem jeweiligen Nitritvorläufer hergestellt. Das Massenspektrum zeigte, dass zwei Produkte mit C11 und drei Produkte mit C14 Zusammensetzung entstanden. Alle Massensignale waren gleichmäßig mit einem Abstand von zwei Masseneinheiten verteilt, was eine enge Beziehung der Spezies im Hinblick auf ihre Bildung nahe legt. So wurden die zwei C11 Spezies als Diphenylmethan und Fluoren identifiziert, welche über Zyklisierung miteinander in Verbindung stehen. Das schwerste Produkt im Experiment konnte als Phenanthren identifiziert werden, welches durch die Zyklisierung von Bibenzyl zu 9,10-Dihydrophenantren und anschließender Wasserstoffeliminierung entsteht. Diese Erkenntnis war von besonderer Relevanz, da bisher oft davon ausgegangen wurde, dass das Zwischenprodukt dieser Reaktion Stilben sein müsste; was allerdings in dieser Studie nicht beobachtet wurde. Folglich scheint der erste Schritt dieser Reaktion eine Zyklisierung zu sein und die Wasserstoffeliminierung findet erst im zweiten Schritt statt, wobei Phenanthren gebildet wird. Wenn Benzyl um eine zusätzliche Methyl-Einheit erweitert wird, erhält man die Gruppe der Xylylradikale und ihrer Zerfallsprodukte, den Xylylenen. Diese Moleküle sind ebenfalls von besonderem Interesse in der Verbrennungsforschung, da Xylylradikale das primäre Hochtemperaturprodukt der Wasserstoffeliminierung von Xylolen sind. Xylyole werden häufig in Kraftstoffen als Anti-Klopfmittel eingesetzt und stellen häufig einen großen Anteil dieser dar. Eine weitere Eliminierung von Wasserstoff liefert anschließend die jeweiligen Xylylene. Die Ergebnisse dieser Experimente wurden in Kapitel 3.3 diskutiert. Hierbei wurde das Gasphasen-IR-Fingerprintspektrum aller Xylyl-Isomere in Isolation zum ersten mal ermittelt. Obwohl alle Isomere eine sehr ähnliche Struktur und Symmetrie aufweisen und die resultieren Schwingungsmoden ebenfalls sehr ähnlich sind, war die Auflösung der experimentellen Daten ausreichend für eine eindeutige Zuordnung. Zusätzlich wurden ebenfalls die Dimerisierungsprodukte von meta- und para-Xylyl beobachtet und identifiziert. Eine ähnliche Herangehensweise wurde angewandt, um die Schwingungsspektren der Xylylene zu bestimmen. Hierbei konnte jedoch nur das IR-Spektrum von para-Xylylen als Träger der Masse 104 bei der Pyrolyse des jeweiligen Vorläufers eindeutig identifiziert werden. Für beide Vorläufer der ortho- und meta-Xylylen Experimente konnten lediglich Isomerisierungsprodukte als Träger von m/z = 104 festgestellt werden: Benzocyclobuten und Stilben. Mögliche Gründe für diese Ergebnisse wurden in Kapitel 3.4.3.5 erläutert. Im letzten Teil wurden die Arbeiten zur Zersetzung von Phthalid präsentiert. Das Ziel dieser Studie war die Erzeugung und Charakterisierung von C7 Spezies, insbesondere das Fulvenallenyl Radikal C7H5. Hierbei konnte das erste Gasphasen- Fingerprint-IR-Spektrum von isoliertem C7H5 ermittelt werden, welches in Fig. 3.45 zu sehen ist. Des Weiteren zeigte die Studie, dass Phthalid ein hervorragender Rußvorläufer ist, da eine große Anzahl weiterer Reaktionsprodukte identifiziert werden konnte. Diese beinhalten typische PAHs wie Naphthalen und Phenanthren, sowie ihre methylierten Isomere. Eine große Vielzahl von Molekülen mit terminalen Ethinylseitenketten deuten auf einen großen Einfluss von HACA ähnlichem PAH Wachstum hin. Hierbei wurden insbesondere Reaktionsmechanismen diskutiert, welche experimentspezifische Reaktionsprodukte, wie C5H5 und C7H5, beinhalten und oft Ringexpansionen von 5- zu 6-gliedrigen Ringen aufweisen.
12

Electron Beam Diagnostic at the ELBE Free Electron Laser / Elektronen-Strahldiagnose am ELBE Freie-Elektronen-Laser

Evtushenko, Pavel 08 October 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The radiation source ELBE is a scientific user facility able to generate electromagnetic radiation as well as beams of secondary particles. The figure below shows the layout of the facility. ELBE is based on a superconducting electron linac. The linac consists of two accelerating modules and uses TESLA type nine-cell niobium cavities, two cavities in each module. The cavities were developed at DESY in the framework of the TESLA linear collider project and the X-ray free electron laser (FEL) project. The ELBE linac is designed to operate with an accelerating field gradient of 10 MV/m so that the maximum design electron beam energy at the exit of the second module is 40 MeV. The essential difference of the ELBE linac from the future TESLA and X-ray FEL linacs is that ELBE operates in the continuous wave (CW) mode. ELBE delivers an electron beam with an average current of up to 1 mA. The electron source is a DC thermionic triode delivering beam with energy of 250 keV. The gun beam quality predefines the accelerated beam quality. One application of the electron beam is the generation of bremsstrahlung in the MeV energy range. The bremsstrahlung is used for nuclear spectroscopy experiments. Another application of the electron beam is the generation of quasi-monochromatic X-rays via channeling radiation in a single crystal. Thus X-rays with an energy from 10 keV through 100 keV can be generated. The channeling radiation is used for radio-biological and bio-medical experiments. In the future the ELBE electron beam will be used to produce monoenergetic positrons for material research. One more future application of the beam is the production of neutrons by bremsstrahlung via reactions. The neutrons will be used for material research oriented toward construction of future nuclear fusion reactors. In the author’s opinion, the most exciting and elegant application of the electron beam at ELBE is the infrared FEL. There are two FELs planned to run simultaneously at ELBE. The first one, with an undulator period of 27 mm, is going to operate in the wavelength range from 3 µm through 30 µm. The second one is in the design stage only but it will be built to work at longer wavelengths from 25 µm to 150 µm where the FEL has no competition from conventional quantum lasers. While an infrared FEL makes possible a great variety of experiments it is the device most sensitive to the electron beam quality. This dissertation is dedicated to the development of beam instrumentation and the measurement of electron beam parameters at ELBE. - In Chapter #1 we review fundamentals of FEL operation, discuss the importance of the electron beam quality for the FEL and lay down the requirements imposed by the FEL on the electron beam parameters. - Chapter #2 describes measurements of the transverse emittance we did at ELBE including an explanation of the experimental methods and the measurement error analysis. The transverse emittance was measured with the multislit method in the injector where the beam is space charge dominated. The transverse emittance of the accelerated beam was measured with the quadrupole scan method since the beam is emittance dominated. - Measurements of the electron bunch length, which is in the picosecond range, are described in Chapter #3. The bunch length was estimated from a frequency domain fit of a specially constructed analytical function to the measured power spectrum of the bunch. The power spectrum was obtained as a Fourier transform of the measured autocorrelation function of the coherent transition radiation (CTR). The CTR autocorrelation function was measured with the help of a Martin-Puplett interferometer. - A system of beam position monitors was designed, built, and commissioned in the framework of this effort. The design of our stripline BPM, the corresponding electronics and software is described in Chapter #4 along with the system performance as measured with the ELBE beam.
13

Schwingungsspektroskopische Untersuchung reaktiver Moleküle und ihrer Hochtemperatur-Reaktionsprodukte / Vibrational spectroscopy of reactive molecules and their high-temperature reaction products

Constantinidis, Philipp January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
Schwingungsspektroskopie ist eine vielseitige spektroskopische Methode, mit der Molekülstrukturen und inter-/intramolekulare Wechselwirkungen untersucht werden können. Sie ist deshalb ein hervorragendes Mittel für die Identifikation von Molekülen. Die vorliegende Arbeit umfasst drei Projekte, in denen Schwingungsspektroskopie angewandt wurde, um reaktive Moleküle und ihre Hochtemperatur-Reaktionsprodukte zu untersuchen: 1. Die Aufklärung der Entstehungsmechanismen von polycyclischen aromatischen Kohlenwasserstoffen (PAKs) in Verbrennungsprozessen ist eines der Hauptanliegen der Verbrennungschemie. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde IR/UV-Ion-Dip-Spektroskopie in Verbindung mit DFT-Frequenzrechnungen und FTIR-Messungen angewandt, um Produkte von Radikal-Radikal-Reaktionen in einem Mikroreaktor bei hohen Temperaturen zu identifizieren. Als IR-Laserquelle für die IR/UV-Ion-Dip-Experimente diente der Freie-Elektronen-Laser FELIX (Free-Electron Laser for Infrared eXperiments) in Nijmegen (Niederlande). In einem Teilprojekt wurde der A 1A´ (S1) <- X 1A´ (S0) Übergang in 1-(Phenylethinyl)naphthalin (1-PEN), einem mutmaßlich verbrennungsrelevanten Molekül, mit [1+1]-REMPI-Spektroskopie untersucht. 2. Die Identifikation von gasförmigen Reaktionsprodukten bei der thermischen Analyse (EGA: Emissionsgasanalyse) kann als komplementäre Methode zur DTA/TG zusätzliche Informationen für die Aufklärung von Reaktionsmechanismen liefern. Der Aufbau eines elementaren EGA/FTIR-Experiments, basierend auf einer heizbaren IR-Gaszelle, ermöglichte in der vorliegenden Arbeit die Durchführung dynamischer IR-Messungen, mit denen thermische Umsetzungen von Übergangsmetall-Precursorkomplexen zu Koordinationspolymeren untersucht wurden. 3. Die Synthese des ersten bei Raumtemperatur stabilen Diborins, einer Verbindung mit einer Bor-Bor-Dreifachbindung, stellte einen Meilenstein in der elementorganischen Chemie dar. Dies implizierte eine umfassende Untersuchung der Eigenschaften der BB-Bindung und hatte die Synthese einer Reihe ähnlicher Bor-Bor-Mehrfachbindungssysteme mit variierenden Bindungseigenschaften zur Folge. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde Raman-Spektroskopie in Verbindung mit DFT-Frequenzrechnungen angewandt, um für diese Bor-Bor-Systeme die strukturellen/elektronischen Eigenschaften der zentralen CBBC-Einheit zu untersuchen. / Vibrational spectroscopy is a versatile spectroscopic technique for the investigation of the molecular structure and inter-/intramolecular interactions. Therefore it is an excellent means for their identification. The present work comprises three projects, in which vibrational spectroscopy was applied to study reactive molecules and their high-temperature reaction products: 1. The elucidation of the mechanisms of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) formation in combustion processes is one of the main topics of combustion chemistry. In the present work IR/UV ion dip spectroscopy in combination with DFT frequency computations and FTIR measurements was applied to identify the products of radical-radical reactions in a heated micro-reactor. The free-electron laser FELIX (Free-Electron Laser for Infrared eXperiments) in Nijmegen (the Netherlands) served as the IR laser source for the IR/UV ion dip experiments. As part of the project the A 1A´ (S1) <- X 1A´ (S0) transition in 1-(phenylethynyl)naphthalene (1-PEN), a presumably combustion relevant molecule, was investigated by [1+1]-REMPI spectroscopy. 2. As complementary method to DTA/TG the identification of gaseous reaction products in thermal analysis (EGA: evolved gas analysis) can provide auxiliary information for the elucidation of reaction mechanisms. The setup of a plain EGA/FTIR experiment based on a heatable IR gas cell in the present work allowed for the conduction of dynamic IR measurements. By this means thermal conversions of transition metal precursor complexes to coordination polymers were investigated. 3. The synthesis of the first ambient-temperature stable diboryne, a compound with a boron-boron triple bond, constituted a milestone in element organic chemistry. This implied a comprehensive investigation on the properties of the BB bond and was followed by the synthesis of a series of similar boron boron multiple bond systems with varying bond properties. In the present work Raman spectroscopy in combination with DFT frequency computations was conducted on these boron boron systems to investigate the structural/electronic properties of their central CBBC unit.
14

Entwicklung von Comptondioden zur Strahlverlustdiagnose am S-DALINAC und Untersuchungen thermischer Laser-Gewebe-Wechselwirkungen am Freie-Elektronen-Laser

Schweizer, Bernd. Unknown Date (has links)
Techn. Universiẗat, Diss., 2002--Darmstadt.
15

THz Near-Field Microscopy and Spectroscopy / THz Nahfeld Mikroskopie und Spektroskopie

von Ribbeck, Hans-Georg 02 April 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Imaging with THz radiation at nanoscale resolution is highly desirable for specific material investigations that cannot be obtained in other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. Nevertheless, classical free-space focusing of THz waves is limited to a >100 μm spatial resolution, due to the diffraction limit. However, the scattering- type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) promises to break this diffraction barrier. In this work, the realization of s-SNOM and spectroscopy for the THz spectral region from 30–300 μm (1–10 THz) is presented. This has been accomplished by using two inherently different radiation sources at distinct experimental setups: A femtosecond laser driven photoconductive antenna, emitting pulsed broadband THz radiation from 0.2–2 THz and a free-electron laser (FEL) as narrow-band high-intensity source, tunable from 1.3–10 THz. With the photoconductive antenna system, it was demonstrated for the first time that near-field spectroscopy using broadband THz-pulses, is achievable. Hereby, Terahertz time-domain spectroscopy with a mechanical delay stage (THz-TDS) was realized to obtain spectroscopic s-SNOM information, with an additional asynchronous optical sampling (ASOPS) option for rapid far-field measurements. The near-field spectral capabilities of the microscope are demonstrated with measurements on gold and on variably doped silicon samples. Here it was shown that the spectral response follows the theoretical prediction according to the Drude and the dipole model. While the broadband THz-TDS based s-SNOM in principle allows for the parallel recording of the full spectral response, the weak average power of the THz source ultimately limits the technique to optically investigate selected sample locations only. Therefore, for true THz near-field imaging, a FEL as a high-intensity narrow- band but highly-tunable THz source in combination with the s-SNOM technique, has been explored. Here, the characteristic near-field signatures at wavelengths from 35–230 μm are shown. Moreover, the realization of material sensitive THz near-field imaging is demonstrated by optically resolving, a structured gold rod with a reso- lution of up to 60 nm at 98 μm wavelength. Not only can the gold be distinguished from the silica substrate but moreover parts of the structure have been identified to be residual resin from the fabrication process. Furthermore, in order to explore the resolution capabilities of the technique, the near-fields of patterned gold nano- structures (Fischer pattern) were imaged with a 50 nm resolution at wavelengths up to 230 μm (1.2 THz). Finally, the imaging of a topography-independent optical material contrast of embedded organic structures, at exemplary 150 μm wavelength is shown, thereby demonstrating that the recorded near-field signal alone allows us to identify materials on the nanometer scale. The ability to measure spectroscopic images by THz-s-SNOM, will be of benefit to fundamental research into nanoscale composites, nano-structured conductivity phenomena and metamaterials, and furthermore will enable applications in the chemical and electronics industries. / Die Bildgebung mit THz Strahlung im Nanobereich ist höchst wünschenswert für genaue Materialuntersuchungen, welche nicht in anderen Spektralbereichen durchgeführt werden kann. Aufgrund des Beugungslimits ist kann jedoch mit klassischen Methoden keine bessere Auflösung als etwa 100 μm für THz-Strahlung erreicht werden. Die Methode der Streulicht-Nahfeldmikroskopie (s-SNOM) verspricht jedoch dieses Beugungslimit zu durchbrechen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird die Realisierung der Nahfeld-Mikroskopie und Spektroskopie im THz-Spektralbereich von 30–1500 μm (0.2–10 THz) präsentiert. Dies wurde mittels zweier grundsätzlich unterschiedlichen Strahlungsquellen an separaten Experimentaufbauten erreicht: Einer photoleitenden Antenne welche gepulste breitbandige THz-Strahlung von 0.2–2 THz emittiert, sowie einem Freie- Elektronen Laser (FEL) als schmalbandige hochleistungs Quelle, durchstimmbar von 1.3–10 THz. Mit dem photoleitenden Antennensystem konnte zum ersten mal demonstriert werden, dass mit breitbandigen THz-Pulsen Nahfeldspektroskopie möglich ist. Dazu wurde die übliche THz-Time-Domain-Spektroskopie (THz-TDS) zur Erhaltung der spektroskopischen s-SNOM Informationen, sowie asynchrones optisches Abtasten (ASOPS) für schnelle Fernfeld Spektroskopie eingesetzt. Die nahfeldspektroskopischen Fähigkeiten des Mikroskops wurden anhand von Messungen an Gold sowie unterschiedlich dotierten Siliziumproben demonstriert. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass die spektrale Antwort den theoretischen Voraussagen des Drude- sowie Dipol Modells folgt. Während das breitband THz-TDS basierte s-SNOM spektroskopische Nahfelduntersuchungen zulässt, limitiert jedoch die schwache Ausgangsleistung der THz-quelle diese Technik insofern, dass praktisch nur Punktspektroskopie an ausgesuchten Probenstellen möglich ist. Für echte nanoskopische Nahfeldbildgebung wurde daher ein FEL als durchstimmbare hochleistungs THz-Quelle in Kombination mit der s-SNOM-Technik erforscht. Hierzu wurden die charakteristischen Nahfeld-Signaturen bei Wellenlängen von 35–230 μm untersucht, gefolgt von die Verwirklichung materialsensitiver THz Nahfeldbildgebung gezeigt an Goldstreifen mit bis zu 60 nm Auflösung. Dabei kann nicht nur das Gold von dem Glassubstrat unterschieden werden, sondern auch Ablagerungen als Überreste des Fabrikationsprozesses identifiziert werden. Um die Grenzen der Auflösungsmöglichkeiten dieser Technik zu sondieren, wurden weiterhin die Nahfelder von gemusterten Gold-Nanostrukturen (Fischer-Pattern) bei Wellenlängen bis zu 230 μm (1.2 THz) abgebildet. Hierbei wurde eine Auflösung von 50 nm festgestellt. Schliesslich konnte der topographieunabhängige Materialkontrast von eingebetteten organischen Strukturen, exemplarisch bei 150 μm Wellenlänge, gezeigt werden. Die Fähigkeit, spektroskopische Aufnahmen mittels der THZ-s-SNOM Technik zu erzeugen, wird der Grundlagenforschung und in der Nanotechnologie zu Gute kommen, und weiterhin Anwendungen in der Chemischen- und Halbleiterindustrie ermöglichen.
16

Electron Beam Diagnostic at the ELBE Free Electron Laser

Evtushenko, Pavel 21 October 2004 (has links)
The radiation source ELBE is a scientific user facility able to generate electromagnetic radiation as well as beams of secondary particles. The figure below shows the layout of the facility. ELBE is based on a superconducting electron linac. The linac consists of two accelerating modules and uses TESLA type nine-cell niobium cavities, two cavities in each module. The cavities were developed at DESY in the framework of the TESLA linear collider project and the X-ray free electron laser (FEL) project. The ELBE linac is designed to operate with an accelerating field gradient of 10 MV/m so that the maximum design electron beam energy at the exit of the second module is 40 MeV. The essential difference of the ELBE linac from the future TESLA and X-ray FEL linacs is that ELBE operates in the continuous wave (CW) mode. ELBE delivers an electron beam with an average current of up to 1 mA. The electron source is a DC thermionic triode delivering beam with energy of 250 keV. The gun beam quality predefines the accelerated beam quality. One application of the electron beam is the generation of bremsstrahlung in the MeV energy range. The bremsstrahlung is used for nuclear spectroscopy experiments. Another application of the electron beam is the generation of quasi-monochromatic X-rays via channeling radiation in a single crystal. Thus X-rays with an energy from 10 keV through 100 keV can be generated. The channeling radiation is used for radio-biological and bio-medical experiments. In the future the ELBE electron beam will be used to produce monoenergetic positrons for material research. One more future application of the beam is the production of neutrons by bremsstrahlung via reactions. The neutrons will be used for material research oriented toward construction of future nuclear fusion reactors. In the author&amp;amp;#8217;s opinion, the most exciting and elegant application of the electron beam at ELBE is the infrared FEL. There are two FELs planned to run simultaneously at ELBE. The first one, with an undulator period of 27 mm, is going to operate in the wavelength range from 3 µm through 30 µm. The second one is in the design stage only but it will be built to work at longer wavelengths from 25 µm to 150 µm where the FEL has no competition from conventional quantum lasers. While an infrared FEL makes possible a great variety of experiments it is the device most sensitive to the electron beam quality. This dissertation is dedicated to the development of beam instrumentation and the measurement of electron beam parameters at ELBE. - In Chapter #1 we review fundamentals of FEL operation, discuss the importance of the electron beam quality for the FEL and lay down the requirements imposed by the FEL on the electron beam parameters. - Chapter #2 describes measurements of the transverse emittance we did at ELBE including an explanation of the experimental methods and the measurement error analysis. The transverse emittance was measured with the multislit method in the injector where the beam is space charge dominated. The transverse emittance of the accelerated beam was measured with the quadrupole scan method since the beam is emittance dominated. - Measurements of the electron bunch length, which is in the picosecond range, are described in Chapter #3. The bunch length was estimated from a frequency domain fit of a specially constructed analytical function to the measured power spectrum of the bunch. The power spectrum was obtained as a Fourier transform of the measured autocorrelation function of the coherent transition radiation (CTR). The CTR autocorrelation function was measured with the help of a Martin-Puplett interferometer. - A system of beam position monitors was designed, built, and commissioned in the framework of this effort. The design of our stripline BPM, the corresponding electronics and software is described in Chapter #4 along with the system performance as measured with the ELBE beam.
17

Evaluation numerischer Methoden zur Berechnung von Synchrotronstrahlung am ersten Bunchkompressor des Freie-Elektronen-Lasers FLASH

Paech, Andreas Robert. Unknown Date (has links)
Darmstadt, Techn. Universiẗat, Diss., 2008. / Dateien im PDF-Format.
18

High-Yield Optical Undulators Scalable to Optical Free-Electron Laser Operation by Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering

Steiniger, Klaus 18 April 2018 (has links) (PDF)
All across physics research, incoherent and coherent light sources are extensively utilized. Especially highly brilliant X-ray sources such as third generation synchrotrons or free-electron lasers have become an invaluable tool enabling experimental techniques that are unique to these kinds of light sources. But these sources have developed to large scale facilities and a demand in compact laboratory scale sources providing radiation of similar quality arises nowadays. This thesis focuses on Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering (TWTS) which allows for the realization of ultra-compact, inherently synchronized and highly brilliant light sources. The TWTS geometry provides optical undulators, through which electrons pass and thereby emit radiation, with hundreds to thousands of undulator periods by utilizing pulse-front tilted lasers pulses from high peak-power laser systems. TWTS can realize incoherent radiation sources with orders of magnitude higher photon yield than established head-on Thomson sources. Moreover, optical free-electron lasers (OFELs) can be realized with TWTS if state-of-the-art technology in electron accelerators and laser systems is utilized. Tilting the laser pulse front with respect to the wavefront by half of this interaction angle optimizes electron and laser pulse overlap by compensating the spatial offset between electrons and the laser pulse-front at the beginning of the interaction when the electrons are far from the laser pulse axis. The laser pulse-front tilt ensures continuous overlap between electrons and laser pulse while the electrons cross the laser pulse cross-sectional area. Thus the interaction distance can be controlled in TWTS by the laser pulse width rather than laser pulse duration. Utilizing wide, petawatt class laser pulses allows realizing thousands of optical undulator periods. This thesis will show that TWTS OFELs emitting ultraviolet radiation are realizable today with existing technology for electron accelerators and laser systems. The requirements on electron bunch and laser pulse quality of these ultraviolet TWTS OFELs are discussed in detail as well as the corresponding requirements of TWTS OFELs emitting in the soft and hard X-ray range. These requirements are derived from scaling laws which stem from a self-consistent analytic description of the electron bunch and radiation field dynamics in TWTS OFELs presented within this thesis. It is shown that these dynamics in TWTS OFELs are qualitatively equivalent to the electron bunch and radiation field dynamics of standard free-electron lasers which analytically proves the applicability of TWTS for the realization of an optical free-electron laser. Furthermore, experimental setup strategies to generate the pulse-front tilted TWTS laser pulses are presented and designs of experimental setups for the above examples are discussed. The presented setup strategies provide dispersion compensation, required due to angular dispersion of the laser pulse, which is especially relevant when building compact, high-yield hard X-ray TWTS sources in large interaction angle setups. An example of such an enhanced Thomson source by TWTS, which provides orders of magnitude higher spectral photon density than a comparable head-on interaction geometry, is presented, too
19

High-Yield Optical Undulators Scalable to Optical Free-Electron Laser Operation by Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering

Steiniger, Klaus 18 April 2018 (has links)
All across physics research, incoherent and coherent light sources are extensively utilized. Especially highly brilliant X-ray sources such as third generation synchrotrons or free-electron lasers have become an invaluable tool enabling experimental techniques that are unique to these kinds of light sources. But these sources have developed to large scale facilities and a demand in compact laboratory scale sources providing radiation of similar quality arises nowadays. This thesis focuses on Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering (TWTS) which allows for the realization of ultra-compact, inherently synchronized and highly brilliant light sources. The TWTS geometry provides optical undulators, through which electrons pass and thereby emit radiation, with hundreds to thousands of undulator periods by utilizing pulse-front tilted lasers pulses from high peak-power laser systems. TWTS can realize incoherent radiation sources with orders of magnitude higher photon yield than established head-on Thomson sources. Moreover, optical free-electron lasers (OFELs) can be realized with TWTS if state-of-the-art technology in electron accelerators and laser systems is utilized. Tilting the laser pulse front with respect to the wavefront by half of this interaction angle optimizes electron and laser pulse overlap by compensating the spatial offset between electrons and the laser pulse-front at the beginning of the interaction when the electrons are far from the laser pulse axis. The laser pulse-front tilt ensures continuous overlap between electrons and laser pulse while the electrons cross the laser pulse cross-sectional area. Thus the interaction distance can be controlled in TWTS by the laser pulse width rather than laser pulse duration. Utilizing wide, petawatt class laser pulses allows realizing thousands of optical undulator periods. This thesis will show that TWTS OFELs emitting ultraviolet radiation are realizable today with existing technology for electron accelerators and laser systems. The requirements on electron bunch and laser pulse quality of these ultraviolet TWTS OFELs are discussed in detail as well as the corresponding requirements of TWTS OFELs emitting in the soft and hard X-ray range. These requirements are derived from scaling laws which stem from a self-consistent analytic description of the electron bunch and radiation field dynamics in TWTS OFELs presented within this thesis. It is shown that these dynamics in TWTS OFELs are qualitatively equivalent to the electron bunch and radiation field dynamics of standard free-electron lasers which analytically proves the applicability of TWTS for the realization of an optical free-electron laser. Furthermore, experimental setup strategies to generate the pulse-front tilted TWTS laser pulses are presented and designs of experimental setups for the above examples are discussed. The presented setup strategies provide dispersion compensation, required due to angular dispersion of the laser pulse, which is especially relevant when building compact, high-yield hard X-ray TWTS sources in large interaction angle setups. An example of such an enhanced Thomson source by TWTS, which provides orders of magnitude higher spectral photon density than a comparable head-on interaction geometry, is presented, too
20

Dynamics of Highly Charged Finite Systems Induced by Intense X-ray Pulses

Camacho Garibay, Abraham 01 November 2016 (has links) (PDF)
The recent availability of X-ray Free Electron Lasers (XFELs) has opened a completely new and unexplored regime for the study of light-matter interactions. The extremely bright intensities delivered by XFELs can couple many photons into the target, turning well known interactions such as photoionization and scattering into new, non-linear, complex many-body phenomena. This thesis reports theoretical investigations aiming to improve the understanding of the fundamental processes and dynamics triggered by intense X-ray pulses, with a special focus in finite systems such as molecules and clusters. Sequential multiple photoionization in atomic clusters was investigated, where previous observations were extended for higher charge states where direct photoionization is frustrated. Through a rate equation study and subsequent molecular dynamics simulations, it was found that frustrated ionization is partially responsible for the low-energy peak observed in the electron energy spectrum. The influence of plasma evaporation over the formation of the sequential low-energy peak was also investigated, identifying the effects of the system size and photon energy. Multiple channel ionization was also investigated for the case of fullerenes. This is done through a series of studies, starting from a simplified rate equation scheme, and culminating with full molecular dynamics simulations. From these results, a good insight was obtained over the origin, physical meaning, and relevant parameters that give rise to the complicated features observed in the electronic spectra. The mechanisms responsible of all these features are expected to be present in other systems, making these results quite general. Diffractive imaging of biomolecules was studied in a final step, with a particular focus on the influence of intramolecular charge transfer mechanisms. To this end a conformer of T4 Lysozyme was used, a representative enzyme with well known structure. Charge migration is found to allow for additional processes such as proton ejection, a mechanism which enables an efficient release of energy from the system. This mechanism considerably suppresses structural damage for heavy ions, improving the quality of the measured diffraction patterns.

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