Time-resolved x-ray microscopy for materials science
Haidan Wen, Mathew J. Cherukara, and Martin V. Holt

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in time-resolved x-ray microscopy, highlighting technological improvements at large-scale facilities that enable ultrafast nanoscale imaging for materials science and condensed matter physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent progress and future outlooks in time-resolved x-ray microscopy techniques and their applications.
Findings
Significant reduction in x-ray emittance enhances imaging resolution.
Fully coherent ultrashort x-ray pulses enable ultrafast nanoscale imaging.
Potential for new scientific discoveries in materials science.
Abstract
X-ray microscopy has been an indispensable tool to image nanoscale properties for materials research. One of its recent advances is to extend microscopic studies to the time domain for visualizing the dynamics of nanoscale phenomena. Large-scale x-ray facilities have been the powerhouse of time-resolved x-ray microscopy. Their upgrades including a significant reduction of the x-ray emittance at storage rings and fully coherent ultrashort x-ray pulses at free electron lasers, will lead to new developments in instrumentation and open new scientific opportunities for x-ray imaging of nanoscale dynamics with the simultaneous attainment of unprecedentedly high spatial and temporal resolutions. This review presents recent progress in and the outlook for time-resolved x-ray microscopy in the context of ultrafast nanoscale imaging and its applications to condensed matter physics and materials…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray Imaging Techniques · Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications · X-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence Analysis
