chemRIXS Science Goals
Understanding the fundamental processes of photo-chemistry is essential for directed design of photo-catalytic systems for chemical transformation and solar energy conversion that are efficient, chemically selective, robust, and based on earth-abundant elements. The central events of excited state chemistry critically influence the performance of photo-catalysts since stable charge separation, transport, and localization are mediated by strong interaction between electronic and nuclear structure.
New tools that enable direct observation of these central events, on fundamental time scales, and with chemical specificity, will qualitatively advance our understanding of chemical dynamics in photo-catalytic systems, and advance the development of design principles for directing molecular and materials synthesis.
The high repetition rate of LCLS-II combined with advanced instrumentation for time-resolved resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) will map the energy distribution and evolution of occupied and unoccupied molecular orbitals of model complexes and functional photo-catalysts in operating (liquid) environments.
chemRIXS Contacts
Kristjan Kunnus
chemRIXS Instrument Lead Scientist
(650) 926-2829
kristjan@slac.stanford.edu
David J. Hoffman
Instrument Scientist
(650) 926-3530
djhoff@slac.stanford.edu
Douglas Garratt
Instrument Scientist
(650) 926-2968
dgarratt@slac.stanford.edu
Raybel Almeida
Area Manager
(650) 926-3370
rayalm@slac.stanford.edu
Matt Bain
Laser Scientist
(650) 926-4782
mattbain@slac.stanford.edu
Quentin Yougoubare
Mechanical Engineer
(650) 926-4128
qyou@slac.stanford.edu
Jyoti Joshi
Controls Engineer
(650) 926-3065
jjoshi@slac.stanford.edu
Christina Hampton
Sample Delivery
(650) 926-2081
cyh0824@slac.stanford.edu
Peter Nguyen
Science & Engineering Associate
(650) 926-4787
nguyenpk@slac.stanford.edu
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chemRIXS Control Room
(650) 926-7468
chemRIXS Hutch
(650) 926-7943
(650) 926-7947