4.6 Article

Femtosecond diffraction and dynamic high pressure science

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 132, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0089388

Keywords

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Funding

  1. AWE through the Oxford Centre for High Energy Density Science (OxCHEDS)
  2. EPSRC [EP/J017256/1, EP/S022155/1]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  4. LLNL-LDRD Program [21-ERD-032]

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High-pressure solid-state materials are prevalent in the Universe, and X-ray diffraction has been used for nearly a century to understand the structure of matter under extreme conditions. With advances in X-ray technologies, novel FELs can now produce high quality single-shot diffraction data in a short period of time.
Solid-state material at high pressure is prevalent throughout the Universe, and an understanding of the structure of matter under such extreme conditions, gleaned from x-ray diffraction, has been pursued for the best part of a century. The highest pressures that can be reached to date (2 TPa) in combination with x-ray diffraction diagnosis have been achieved by dynamic compression via laser ablation [A. Lazicki et al., Nature 589, 532-535 (2021)]. The past decade has witnessed remarkable advances in x-ray technologies, with novel x-ray Free-Electron-Lasers (FELs) affording the capacity to produce high quality single-shot diffraction data on timescales below 100 fs. We provide a brief history of the field of dynamic compression, spanning from when the x-ray sources were almost always laser-plasma based, to the current state-of-the art diffraction capabilities provided by FELs. We give an overview of the physics of dynamic compression, diagnostic techniques, and the importance of understanding how the rate of compression influences the final temperatures reached. We provide illustrative examples of experiments performed on FEL facilities that are starting to give insight into how materials deform at ultrahigh strain rates, their phase diagrams, and the types of states that can be reached. We emphasize that there often appear to be differences in the crystalline phases observed between the use of static and dynamic compression techniques. We give our perspective on both the current state of this rapidly evolving field and some glimpses of how we see it developing in the near-to-medium term. (C) 2022 Author(s)

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