Time-resolved spectroscopy at the picosecond laser-triggered electron accelerator ELYSE

2006 
Abstract ELYSE is a fast kinetics center created for pulse radiolysis with picosecond time-resolution. The facility is a 4–9 MeV electron accelerator using a subpicosecond laser pulse to produce an electron pulse from a Cs 2 Te semiconductor photocathode and RF gun technology for the electron acceleration. The pulse duration is around 5 ps at low charge ( 8 MeV. The dark current at the target is less than 1% of the pulse photocurrent. Time-resolved absorbance measurements in cells placed in front of the electron beam are achieved using pulsed laser diodes, or a xenon flash lamp as light sources, and photodiodes connected to a 3 GHz transient digitizer or a streak camera (250–800 nm range and 3.7 ps time resolution) as detection instruments. In addition, the synchronization between the laser beam and the electron beam is exploited to measure the absorbance by a pump-probe set-up, the pump being the electron pulse produced by the laser pulse, and the probe being part of the laser beam (120 fs–3 ps) delayed by a variable optical line.
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