Snapshot of the shock wave
(centre) racing through a diamond sample. The ripples on the left are
caused by the edge of the sample.
Credit: Andreas Schropp/DESY
Researchers have used ultra-short
pulses of X-rays to film shock waves in diamonds. The study headed by
DESY scientists opens up new possibilities for studying the properties
of materials. Thanks to the extremely bright and short X-ray flashes,
the researchers were able to follow the rapid, dynamic changes taking
place in the shock wave with a high spatial as well as a high temporal
resolution. The team around DESY physicist Prof. Christian Schroer is
presenting its results in the journal Scientific Reports. "With
our experiment we are venturing into new scientific terrain," says the
first author of the scientific paper, Dr. Andreas Schropp of DESY. "We
have managed for the first time to use X-ray imaging to quantitatively
determine the local properties and the dynamic changes of matter under
extreme conditions."
For their pilot study, the scientists analysed diamond samples with
the world's most powerful X-ray laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source
LCLS at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in the U.S. The
researchers fixed a three centimetre long diamond strip, just 0.3
millimetre thick, in a specimen holder and triggered a shock wave with a
brief flash from a powerful infrared laser that hit the narrow edge of
the diamond; this pulse lasted 0.15 billionths of a second (150
picoseconds) and reached a power level of up to 12 trillion watts (12
terawatts) per square centimetre. The resulting shock wave shot through
the diamond at about 72,000 kilometres per hour.
"In order to take snapshots of such rapid processes, you need to use
extremely short exposure times," explains Schropp. The X-ray pulses
produced by the LCLS last just 50 millionths of a billionth of a second
(50 femtoseconds), allowing them to capture even the fastest movements.
However, as the diamond sample was destroyed with every shot, the
scientists had to repeat the experiment with identical specimens for
each image, whereby each picture was taken a little later to show the
shock wave at a slightly later time. Finally, they assembled these still
images to create a film, as in a "flip book."
Using this film, the scientists were able to determine quantitatively
the change in density due to the shock wave. The X-ray microscope
specifically developed for this purpose, permits details of the sample
down to 500 millionths of a millimetre (500 nanometres) to be resolved.
Together with the speed of sound measured, this allows the state of the
diamond to be determined under conditions of extreme pressure. The
analysis shows that the intense shock wave compresses the diamond -- one
of the hardest materials in the world -- locally by almost ten percent.
This pilot study offers new insights into the structure of diamonds.
"In view of the remarkable physical properties of diamond it continues
to be important both scientifically and technologically," says Prof.
Jerome Hastings of SLAC. "We have for the first time directly imaged
shock waves in diamond using X-rays, and this opens up new perspectives
on the dynamic behaviour of diamond under high pressure." Material
scientists are particularly interested in the complex behaviour behind
the initial shock front, which can already be seen in these first
images.
The scientists hope that by refining X-ray lasers and optimising the
detector, the spatial resolution can be further improved to less than
100 nanometres, for instance also at the superconducting X-ray laser
European XFEL that is currently being built from the DESY campus in
Hamburg to the neighbouring town of Schenefeld. Thanks to the
penetrating properties of X-rays, this technique can be applied to
virtually any solid material, such as iron or aluminium. "The method is
important for a series of applications in material science and for
describing the physical processes occurring inside planets," summarises
Schroer.
Apart from DESY and SLAC, the Technical University of Dresden, the
University of Oxford in the UK, and the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory (LLNL) in the U.S. were also involved in the research.
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