qRIXS Layout & Specifications
The qRIXS instrument is comprised of a sample chamber and a rotatable spectrometer consisting of grating and detector assemblies (and auxiliary components), continuously covering the range of scattering angles 40-150 degrees in the horizontal plane.
The spectrometer is designed to achieve a target resolving power of 50,000 at 1 keV, with the option for lower resolving power, ~10,000, and higher throughput through the use of a second grating. The scattered x-rays will be horizontally collimated via a parabolic mirror to increase acceptance and facilitate future polarization-resolved studies.
The sample chamber is designed to accommodate the technique of Resonant Elastic X-ray Scattering (REXS). For this, a suite of in-vacuum point and 2D detectors will be implemented on a rotating arm to allow for rapid X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) and (super)structural peak finding for sample orientation.
The chamber is equipped with an in-vacuum diffractometer with 6 axis of motion. Sample cooling down to 25 K will be possible. In-coupling of a wide variety of laser radiation, including long-wavelength THz beams, will be accommodated. Sample transfer will be facilitated via a load-lock chamber. In addition, provisions are made so that X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) experiments on solid samples could be performed as well.
qRIXS contacts
Georgi Dakovski
qRIXS Instrument Lead Scientist
(650) 926-5703
dakovski@slac.stanford.edu
Lingjia Shen
Instrument Scientist
(650) 926-3087
lingjias@slac.stanford.edu
Daniel Jost
Instrument Scientist
jostd@slac.stanford.edu
Joshua J. Turner
Instrument Scientist
joshuat@slac.stanford.edu
Jake Koralek
Instrument Scientist
(650) 926-3335
koralek@slac.stanford.edu
Raybel Almeida
Area Manager
(650) 926-3370
rayalm@slac.stanford.edu
Giacomo Coslovich
Laser Scientist
(650) 926-5091
gcoslovich@slac.stanford.edu
Patrick Oppermann
Controls Engineer
(650) 926-2423
oppermann@slac.stanford.edu
Quentin Yougoubare
Mechanical Engineer
(650) 926-4128
qyou@slac.stanford.edu
Peter Nguyen
Science & Engineering Associate
(650) 926-4787
nguyenpk@slac.stanford.edu