Attosecond Spectroscopy of Liquids and Solutes

A new apparatus for attosecond time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of liquids has been built. It combines a liquid microjet source with a magnetic-bottle photoelectron spectrometer and an actively-stabilized attosecond beamline. The photoelectron spectrometer permits venting and pumping of the interaction chamber without affecting the low pressure in the flight tube. This pressure separation has been realized through a sliding skimmer plate, which effectively seals the flight tube in its closed position and functions as a differential pumping stage in its open position. A high-harmonic photon spectrometer, attached to the photoelectron spectrometer exit port is used to acquire photon spectra for calibration purposes. Attosecond pulse trains have been used to record photoelectron spectra of noble gases, water in the gas and liquid states as well as solvated species. RABBIT scans demonstrate the attosecond resolution of this setup [1].

Enlarged view: Liquid Jet Setup
Figure 1. General design of the liquid-phase attosecond-time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy experiment. A quartz noozle injects a liquid filament into vacuum. Phase-locked XUV and IR pulses generate an electronic wave packet in the continuum which enters the time-of-flight spectrometer through the skimmer opening.  

Publications:
[1]   I. Jordan, M. Huppert, M. A. Brown, J. A. van Bokhoven, H. J. Wörner
DownloadPhotoelectron spectrometer for attosecond spectroscopy of liquids and gases (PDF, 3.5 MB)
Rev. Sci. Instrum. 86, 123905:1-10 (2015)
doi: external page10.1063/1.4938175external page

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