Ignition of a helium nanoplasma by x-ray multiple ionization of a heavy rare-gas core.
/ Authors
D. Schomas, C. Medina, L. Ltaief, R. B. Fink, S. Mandal, S. Krishnan, R. Michiels, M. Debatin, F. Stienkemeier, S. Toleikis
and 7 more authors
C. Passow, N. Ekanayake, C. Ott, R. Moshammer, T. Pfeifer, A. Heidenreich, M. Mudrich
/ Abstract
The dynamics of an x-ray-ionized two-component core-shell nanosystem is probed using doped helium (He) nanodroplets. First, a soft x-ray pump pulse selectively inner-shell ionizes the core cluster formed of heavier rare-gas atoms, causing electron migration from the He shell to the highly charged core. This ignites a He nanoplasma which is then driven by an intense near-infrared probe pulse. The ultrafast charge redistribution, evidenced by the rise of He$^+$ and He$^{2+}$ ion yields from the nanoplasma within $<70$ fs, leads to strong damping of the core cluster expansion. Thus, He droplets act as efficient tampers that reduce the radiation damage of embedded nanostructures, a property that could be exploited for improving coherent diffraction images.
Journal: arXiv: Atomic and Molecular Clusters