Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Diling Zhu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Diling Zhu.


Nature | 2012

Creation and diagnosis of a solid-density plasma with an X-ray free-electron laser

S. M. Vinko; O. Ciricosta; B. I. Cho; K. Engelhorn; H.-K. Chung; Colin Brown; T. Burian; J. Chalupský; Roger Falcone; Catherine Graves; V. Hajkova; Andrew Higginbotham; L. Juha; J. Krzywinski; Hae Ja Lee; Marc Messerschmidt; C. D. Murphy; Y. Ping; Andreas Scherz; W. F. Schlotter; S. Toleikis; J. J. Turner; L. Vysin; T. Wang; B. Wu; U. Zastrau; Diling Zhu; R. W. Lee; P. A. Heimann; B. Nagler

Matter with a high energy density (>105 joules per cm3) is prevalent throughout the Universe, being present in all types of stars and towards the centre of the giant planets; it is also relevant for inertial confinement fusion. Its thermodynamic and transport properties are challenging to measure, requiring the creation of sufficiently long-lived samples at homogeneous temperatures and densities. With the advent of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) X-ray laser, high-intensity radiation (>1017 watts per cm2, previously the domain of optical lasers) can be produced at X-ray wavelengths. The interaction of single atoms with such intense X-rays has recently been investigated. An understanding of the contrasting case of intense X-ray interaction with dense systems is important from a fundamental viewpoint and for applications. Here we report the experimental creation of a solid-density plasma at temperatures in excess of 106 kelvin on inertial-confinement timescales using an X-ray free-electron laser. We discuss the pertinent physics of the intense X-ray–matter interactions, and illustrate the importance of electron–ion collisions. Detailed simulations of the interaction process conducted with a radiative-collisional code show good qualitative agreement with the experimental results. We obtain insights into the evolution of the charge state distribution of the system, the electron density and temperature, and the timescales of collisional processes. Our results should inform future high-intensity X-ray experiments involving dense samples, such as X-ray diffractive imaging of biological systems, material science investigations, and the study of matter in extreme conditions.


Nature | 2014

Tracking excited-state charge and spin dynamics in iron coordination complexes

Wenkai Zhang; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Uwe Bergmann; Christian Bressler; Matthieu Chollet; Andreas Galler; Wojciech Gawelda; Ryan G. Hadt; Robert W. Hartsock; Thomas Kroll; Kasper Skov Kjær; K. Kubicek; Henrik T. Lemke; Huiyang W. Liang; Drew A. Meyer; Martin Meedom Nielsen; Carola Purser; Edward I. Solomon; Zheng Sun; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tim Brandt van Driel; Gyoergy Vanko; Tsu-Chien Weng; Diling Zhu; Kelly J. Gaffney

Crucial to many light-driven processes in transition metal complexes is the absorption and dissipation of energy by 3d electrons. But a detailed understanding of such non-equilibrium excited-state dynamics and their interplay with structural changes is challenging: a multitude of excited states and possible transitions result in phenomena too complex to unravel when faced with the indirect sensitivity of optical spectroscopy to spin dynamics and the flux limitations of ultrafast X-ray sources. Such a situation exists for archetypal polypyridyl iron complexes, such as [Fe(2,2′-bipyridine)3]2+, where the excited-state charge and spin dynamics involved in the transition from a low- to a high-spin state (spin crossover) have long been a source of interest and controversy. Here we demonstrate that femtosecond resolution X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy, with its sensitivity to spin state, can elucidate the spin crossover dynamics of [Fe(2,2′-bipyridine)3]2+ on photoinduced metal-to-ligand charge transfer excitation. We are able to track the charge and spin dynamics, and establish the critical role of intermediate spin states in the crossover mechanism. We anticipate that these capabilities will make our method a valuable tool for mapping in unprecedented detail the fundamental electronic excited-state dynamics that underpin many useful light-triggered molecular phenomena involving 3d transition metal complexes.


Science | 2013

Ultrafast three-dimensional imaging of lattice dynamics in individual gold nanocrystals.

Jesse N. Clark; Loren Beitra; Gang Xiong; Andrew Higginbotham; David M. Fritz; Henrik T. Lemke; Diling Zhu; Matthieu Chollet; Garth J. Williams; Marc Messerschmidt; Brian Abbey; Ross Harder; Alexander M. Korsunsky; J. S. Wark; Ian K. Robinson

Distorted Nanoparticle Nanoparticles have found many applications in modern technology; however, the full characterization of individual particles is challenging. One of the most interesting mechanical properties is the particles response to lattice distortion. This property has been probed for ensembles of nanoparticles, but the required averaging may distort the results. Clark et al. (p. 56, published online 23 May; see the Perspective by Hartland and Lo) were able to image the generation and subsequent evolution of coherent acoustic phonons from an individual perturbed gold nanocrystal on the picosecond time scale. An x-ray free-electron laser is used to probe the elastic modes of a gold nanocrystal. [Also see Perspective by Hartland and Lo] Key insights into the behavior of materials can be gained by observing their structure as they undergo lattice distortion. Laser pulses on the femtosecond time scale can be used to induce disorder in a “pump-probe” experiment with the ensuing transients being probed stroboscopically with femtosecond pulses of visible light, x-rays, or electrons. Here we report three-dimensional imaging of the generation and subsequent evolution of coherent acoustic phonons on the picosecond time scale within a single gold nanocrystal by means of an x-ray free-electron laser, providing insights into the physics of this phenomenon. Our results allow comparison and confirmation of predictive models based on continuum elasticity theory and molecular dynamics simulations.


Nature | 2012

X-ray and optical wave mixing

Thornton Glover; David M. Fritz; Marco Cammarata; T. K. Allison; Sinisa Coh; Jan M. Feldkamp; Henrik T. Lemke; Diling Zhu; Yiping Feng; Ryan Coffee; M. Fuchs; S. Ghimire; Jun Chen; Sharon Shwartz; David A. Reis; S. E. Harris; Jerome Hastings

Light–matter interactions are ubiquitous, and underpin a wide range of basic research fields and applied technologies. Although optical interactions have been intensively studied, their microscopic details are often poorly understood and have so far not been directly measurable. X-ray and optical wave mixing was proposed nearly half a century ago as an atomic-scale probe of optical interactions but has not yet been observed owing to a lack of sufficiently intense X-ray sources. Here we use an X-ray laser to demonstrate X-ray and optical sum-frequency generation. The underlying nonlinearity is a reciprocal-space probe of the optically induced charges and associated microscopic fields that arise in an illuminated material. To within the experimental errors, the measured efficiency is consistent with first-principles calculations of microscopic optical polarization in diamond. The ability to probe optical interactions on the atomic scale offers new opportunities in both basic and applied areas of science.


Nature | 2016

Structure of photosystem II and substrate binding at room temperature.

Iris D. Young; Mohamed Ibrahim; Ruchira Chatterjee; Sheraz Gul; Franklin Fuller; Sergey Koroidov; Aaron S. Brewster; Rosalie Tran; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Thomas Kroll; Tara Michels-Clark; Hartawan Laksmono; Raymond G. Sierra; Claudiu A. Stan; Rana Hussein; Miao Zhang; Lacey Douthit; Markus Kubin; Casper de Lichtenberg; Long Vo Pham; Håkan Nilsson; Mun Hon Cheah; Dmitriy Shevela; Claudio Saracini; Mackenzie A. Bean; Ina Seuffert; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; Ernest Pastor; Clemens Weninger

Light-induced oxidation of water by photosystem II (PS II) in plants, algae and cyanobacteria has generated most of the dioxygen in the atmosphere. PS II, a membrane-bound multi-subunit pigment protein complex, couples the one-electron photochemistry at the reaction centre with the four-electron redox chemistry of water oxidation at the Mn4CaO5 cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC). Under illumination, the OEC cycles through five intermediate S-states (S0 to S4), in which S1 is the dark-stable state and S3 is the last semi-stable state before O–O bond formation and O2 evolution. A detailed understanding of the O–O bond formation mechanism remains a challenge, and will require elucidation of both the structures of the OEC in the different S-states and the binding of the two substrate waters to the catalytic site. Here we report the use of femtosecond pulses from an X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) to obtain damage-free, room temperature structures of dark-adapted (S1), two-flash illuminated (2F; S3-enriched), and ammonia-bound two-flash illuminated (2F-NH3; S3-enriched) PS II. Although the recent 1.95 Å resolution structure of PS II at cryogenic temperature using an XFEL provided a damage-free view of the S1 state, measurements at room temperature are required to study the structural landscape of proteins under functional conditions, and also for in situ advancement of the S-states. To investigate the water-binding site(s), ammonia, a water analogue, has been used as a marker, as it binds to the Mn4CaO5 cluster in the S2 and S3 states. Since the ammonia-bound OEC is active, the ammonia-binding Mn site is not a substrate water site. This approach, together with a comparison of the native dark and 2F states, is used to discriminate between proposed O–O bond formation mechanisms.


Science | 2015

Three-dimensional charge density wave order in YBa2Cu3O6.67 at high magnetic fields.

S. Gerber; H. Jang; Hiroyuki Nojiri; S. Matsuzawa; H. Yasumura; D. A. Bonn; Ruixing Liang; W. N. Hardy; Zahirul Islam; Apurva Mehta; Sanghoon Song; M. Sikorski; D. Stefanescu; Yiping Feng; Steven A. Kivelson; T. P. Devereaux; Zhi-Xun Shen; Chi-Chang Kao; W. S. Lee; Diling Zhu; J.-S. Lee

Discerning charge patterns in a cuprate Copper oxides are well known to be able to achieve the order required for superconductivity. They can also achieve another order—one that produces patterns in their charge density. Experiments using nuclear magnetic resonanceand resonant x-ray scattering have both detected this so-called charge density wave (CDW) in yttrium-based cuprates. However, the nature of the CDW appeared to be different in the two types of measurement. Gerber et al. used pulsed magnetic fields of up to 28 T, combined with scattering, to bridge the gap (see the Perspective by Julien). As the magnetic field increased, a two-dimensional CDW gave way to a three-dimensional one. Science, this issue p. 949; see also p. 914 X-ray scattering at high magnetic fields is used to probe charge density wave ordering in a cuprate. [Also see Perspective by Julien] Charge density wave (CDW) correlations have been shown to universally exist in cuprate superconductors. However, their nature at high fields inferred from nuclear magnetic resonance is distinct from that measured with x-ray scattering at zero and low fields. We combined a pulsed magnet with an x-ray free-electron laser to characterize the CDW in YBa2Cu3O6.67 via x-ray scattering in fields of up to 28 tesla. While the zero-field CDW order, which develops at temperatures below ~150 kelvin, is essentially two dimensional, at lower temperature and beyond 15 tesla, another three-dimensionally ordered CDW emerges. The field-induced CDW appears around the zero-field superconducting transition temperature; in contrast, the incommensurate in-plane ordering vector is field-independent. This implies that the two forms of CDW and high-temperature superconductivity are intimately linked.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Goniometer-based femtosecond crystallography with X-ray free electron lasers

Aina E. Cohen; S. Michael Soltis; Ana Gonzalez; Laura Aguila; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Christopher O. Barnes; Elizabeth L. Baxter; Winnie Brehmer; Aaron S. Brewster; Axel T. Brunger; Guillermo Calero; Joseph F. Chang; Matthieu Chollet; Paul Ehrensberger; Thomas Eriksson; Yiping Feng; Johan Hattne; Britt Hedman; Michael Hollenbeck; James M. Holton; Stephen Keable; Brian K. Kobilka; Elena G. Kovaleva; Andrew C. Kruse; Henrik T. Lemke; Guowu Lin; Artem Y. Lyubimov; Aashish Manglik; Irimpan I. Mathews; Scott E. McPhillips

Significance The extremely short and bright X-ray pulses produced by X-ray free-electron lasers unlock new opportunities in crystallography-based structural biology research. Efficient methods to deliver crystalline material are necessary due to damage or destruction of the crystal by the X-ray pulse. Crystals for the first experiments were 5 µm or smaller in size, delivered by a liquid injector. We describe a highly automated goniometer-based approach, compatible with crystals of larger and varied sizes, and accessible at cryogenic or ambient temperatures. These methods, coupled with improvements in data-processing algorithms, have resulted in high-resolution structures, unadulterated by the effects of radiation exposure, from only 100 to 1,000 diffraction images. The emerging method of femtosecond crystallography (FX) may extend the diffraction resolution accessible from small radiation-sensitive crystals and provides a means to determine catalytically accurate structures of acutely radiation-sensitive metalloenzymes. Automated goniometer-based instrumentation developed for use at the Linac Coherent Light Source enabled efficient and flexible FX experiments to be performed on a variety of sample types. In the case of rod-shaped Cpl hydrogenase crystals, only five crystals and about 30 min of beam time were used to obtain the 125 still diffraction patterns used to produce a 1.6-Å resolution electron density map. For smaller crystals, high-density grids were used to increase sample throughput; 930 myoglobin crystals mounted at random orientation inside 32 grids were exposed, demonstrating the utility of this approach. Screening results from cryocooled crystals of β2-adrenoreceptor and an RNA polymerase II complex indicate the potential to extend the diffraction resolution obtainable from very radiation-sensitive samples beyond that possible with undulator-based synchrotron sources.


Nature Communications | 2015

Ultrafast myoglobin structural dynamics observed with an X-ray free-electron laser.

Matteo Levantino; Giorgio Schirò; Henrik T. Lemke; Grazia Cottone; J. M. Glownia; Diling Zhu; Mathieu Chollet; Hyotcherl Ihee; Antonio Cupane; Marco Cammarata

Light absorption can trigger biologically relevant protein conformational changes. The light-induced structural rearrangement at the level of a photoexcited chromophore is known to occur in the femtosecond timescale and is expected to propagate through the protein as a quake-like intramolecular motion. Here we report direct experimental evidence of such ‘proteinquake’ observed in myoglobin through femtosecond X-ray solution scattering measurements performed at the Linac Coherent Light Source X-ray free-electron laser. An ultrafast increase of myoglobin radius of gyration occurs within 1 picosecond and is followed by a delayed protein expansion. As the system approaches equilibrium it undergoes damped oscillations with a ~3.6-picosecond time period. Our results unambiguously show how initially localized chemical changes can propagate at the level of the global protein conformation in the picosecond timescale.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

A single-shot transmissive spectrometer for hard x-ray free electron lasers

Diling Zhu; Marco Cammarata; Jan M. Feldkamp; David M. Fritz; Jerome Hastings; Sooheyong Lee; Henrik T. Lemke; James L. Turner; Yiping Feng

We report hard x-ray single-shot spectral measurements of the Linac Coherent Light Source. The spectrometer is based on a 10 μm thick cylindrically bent Si single crystal operating in the symmetric Bragg geometry to provide dispersion and high transmission simultaneously. It covers a spectral range >1% using the Si(111) reflection. Using the Si(333) reflection, it reaches a resolving power of better than 42 000 and transmits >83% of the incident flux at 8.3 keV. The high resolution enabled the observation of individual spectral spikes characteristic of a self-amplified spontaneous emission x-ray free electron laser source. Potential applications of the device are discussed.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

The X-ray Pump-Probe instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source

Matthieu Chollet; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Marco Cammarata; Daniel S. Damiani; Jim Defever; James T. Delor; Yiping Feng; James M. Glownia; J. Brian Langton; S. Nelson; Kelley Ramsey; Marcin Sikorski; Sanghoon Song; Daniel Stefanescu; Venkat Srinivasan; Diling Zhu; Henrik T. Lemke; David M. Fritz

A description of the X-ray Pump–Probe (XPP) instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source. is presented. Recent scientific highlights illustrate the versatility and the time-resolved X-ray diffraction and spectroscopy capabilities of the XPP instrument.

Collaboration


Dive into the Diling Zhu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Henrik T. Lemke

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthieu Chollet

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sanghoon Song

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yiping Feng

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David M. Fritz

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James M. Glownia

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roberto Alonso-Mori

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marcin Sikorski

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Nelson

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge