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Dive into the research topics where J. M. Glownia is active.

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Featured researches published by J. M. Glownia.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

X-ray pulse preserving single-shot optical cross-correlation method for improved experimental temporal resolution

M. Beye; O. Krupin; G. Hays; A. H. Reid; Daniela Rupp; S. de Jong; S. Lee; W. S. Lee; Yi-De Chuang; Ryan Coffee; James Cryan; J. M. Glownia; A. Föhlisch; M. R. Holmes; Alan Fry; William E. White; Christoph Bostedt; A. O. Scherz; Hermann A. Dürr; W. F. Schlotter

We measured the relative arrival time between an optical pulse and a soft x-ray pulse from a free-electron laser. This femtosecond cross-correlation measurement was achieved by observing the change in optical reflectivity induced through the absorption of a fraction of the x-ray pulse. The main x-ray pulse energy remained available for an independent pump-probe experiment where the sample may be opaque to soft x-rays. The method was employed to correct the two-pulse delay data from a canonical pump-probe experiment and demonstrate 130u2009±u200920 fs (FWHM) temporal resolution. We further analyze possible timing jitter sources and point to future improvements.


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.


Nature Materials | 2014

A time-dependent order parameter for ultrafast photoinduced phase transitions

P. Beaud; A. Caviezel; S. O. Mariager; L. Rettig; G. Ingold; Christian Dornes; S. W. Huang; Jeremy A. Johnson; M. Radovic; T. Huber; Teresa Kubacka; A. Ferrer; Henrik T. Lemke; Matthieu Chollet; Diling Zhu; J. M. Glownia; Marcin Sikorski; H. Wadati; Masao Nakamura; M. Kawasaki; Y. Tokura; S. L. Johnson; U. Staub

Strongly correlated electron systems often exhibit very strong interactions between structural and electronic degrees of freedom that lead to complex and interesting phase diagrams. For technological applications of these materials it is important to learn how to drive transitions from one phase to another. A key question here is the ultimate speed of such phase transitions, and to understand how a phase transition evolves in the time domain. Here we apply time-resolved X-ray diffraction to directly measure the changes in long-range order during ultrafast melting of the charge and orbitally ordered phase in a perovskite manganite. We find that although the actual change in crystal symmetry associated with this transition occurs over different timescales characteristic of the many electronic and vibrational coordinates of the system, the dynamics of the phase transformation can be well described using a single time-dependent order parameter that depends exclusively on the electronic excitation.


Nature Communications | 2014

Ultrafast X-ray Auger probing of photoexcited molecular dynamics

Brian K. McFarland; J. P. Farrell; Shungo Miyabe; Francesco Tarantelli; A Aguilar; N. Berrah; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; P. H. Bucksbaum; J C Castagna; Ryan Coffee; James Cryan; L. Fang; Raimund Feifel; Kelly J. Gaffney; J. M. Glownia; Todd J. Martínez; Melanie Mucke; B. Murphy; Adi Natan; T. Osipov; Vladimir Petrovic; S. Schorb; Thomas Schultz; Limor S. Spector; M Swiggers; Ian Tenney; Shibing Wang; J. L. White; W. White

Molecules can efficiently and selectively convert light energy into other degrees of freedom. Disentangling the underlying ultrafast motion of electrons and nuclei of the photoexcited molecule presents a challenge to current spectroscopic approaches. Here we explore the photoexcited dynamics of molecules by an interaction with an ultrafast X-ray pulse creating a highly localized core hole that decays via Auger emission. We discover that the Auger spectrum as a function of photoexcitation--X-ray-probe delay contains valuable information about the nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom from an element-specific point of view. For the nucleobase thymine, the oxygen Auger spectrum shifts towards high kinetic energies, resulting from a particular C-O bond stretch in the ππ* photoexcited state. A subsequent shift of the Auger spectrum towards lower kinetic energies displays the electronic relaxation of the initial photoexcited state within 200u2009fs. Ab-initio simulations reinforce our interpretation and indicate an electronic decay to the nπ* state.


Nature Communications | 2014

Femtosecond X-ray-induced explosion of C 60 at extreme intensity

B. Murphy; T. Osipov; Zoltan Jurek; L. Fang; Sang-Kil Son; M. Mucke; John H. D. Eland; Vitali Zhaunerchyk; Raimund Feifel; L. Avaldi; P. Bolognesi; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; J. Grilj; Markus Guehr; L. J. Frasinski; J. M. Glownia; D.T. Ha; K. Hoffmann; Edwin Kukk; Brian K. McFarland; Catalin Miron; E. Sistrunk; Richard J. Squibb; K. Ueda; Robin Santra; N. Berrah

Understanding molecular femtosecond dynamics under intense X-ray exposure is critical to progress in biomolecular imaging and matter under extreme conditions. Imaging viruses and proteins at an atomic spatial scale and on the time scale of atomic motion requires rigorous, quantitative understanding of dynamical effects of intense X-ray exposure. Here we present an experimental and theoretical study of C60 molecules interacting with intense X-ray pulses from a free-electron laser, revealing the influence of processes not previously reported. Our work illustrates the successful use of classical mechanics to describe all moving particles in C60, an approach that scales well to larger systems, for example, biomolecules. Comparisons of the model with experimental data on C60 ion fragmentation show excellent agreement under a variety of laser conditions. The results indicate that this modelling is applicable for X-ray interactions with any extended system, even at higher X-ray dose rates expected with future light sources.


Nature Methods | 2017

Drop-on-demand sample delivery for studying biocatalysts in action at X-ray free-electron lasers

Franklin Fuller; Sheraz Gul; Ruchira Chatterjee; E. Sethe Burgie; Iris D. Young; Hugo Lebrette; Vivek Srinivas; Aaron S. Brewster; Tara Michels-Clark; Jonathan Clinger; Babak Andi; Mohamed Ibrahim; Ernest Pastor; Casper de Lichtenberg; Rana Hussein; Christopher J. Pollock; Miao Zhang; Claudiu A Stan; Thomas Kroll; Thomas Fransson; Clemens Weninger; Markus Kubin; Pierre Aller; Louise Lassalle; Philipp Bräuer; Mitchell D. Miller; Muhamed Amin; Sergey Koroidov; Christian G. Roessler; Marc Allaire

X-ray crystallography at X-ray free-electron laser sources is a powerful method for studying macromolecules at biologically relevant temperatures. Moreover, when combined with complementary techniques like X-ray emission spectroscopy, both global structures and chemical properties of metalloenzymes can be obtained concurrently, providing insights into the interplay between the protein structure and dynamics and the chemistry at an active site. The implementation of such a multimodal approach can be compromised by conflicting requirements to optimize each individual method. In particular, the method used for sample delivery greatly affects the data quality. We present here a robust way of delivering controlled sample amounts on demand using acoustic droplet ejection coupled with a conveyor belt drive that is optimized for crystallography and spectroscopy measurements of photochemical and chemical reactions over a wide range of time scales. Studies with photosystem II, the phytochrome photoreceptor, and ribonucleotide reductase R2 illustrate the power and versatility of this method.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Femtosecond x-ray scattering study of ultrafast photoinduced structural dynamics in solvated [Co(terpy)(2)](2+).

Elisa Biasin; Tim Brandt van Driel; Kasper S. Kjaer; Asmus Ougaard Dohn; Morten Christensen; Tobias Harlang; Pavel Chabera; Yizhu Liu; Jens Uhlig; Mátyás Pápai; Zoltán Németh; Robert W. Hartsock; Winnie Liang; Jianxin Zhang; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Matthieu Chollet; J. M. Glownia; S. Nelson; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tadesse Assefa; Alexander Britz; Andreas Galler; Wojciech Gawelda; Christian Bressler; Kelly J. Gaffney; Henrik T. Lemke; Klaus B. Møller; Martin Meedom Nielsen; Villy Sundström; György Vankó

We study the structural dynamics of photoexcited [Co(terpy)_{2}]^{2+} in an aqueous solution with ultrafast x-ray diffuse scattering experiments conducted at the Linac Coherent Light Source. Through direct comparisons with density functional theory calculations, our analysis shows that the photoexcitation event leads to elongation of the Co-N bonds, followed by coherent Co-N bond length oscillations arising from the impulsive excitation of a vibrational mode dominated by the symmetrical stretch of all six Co-N bonds. This mode has a period of 0.33xa0ps and decays on a subpicosecond time scale. We find that the equilibrium bond-elongated structure of the high spin state is established on a single-picosecond time scale and that this state has a lifetime of ∼7u2009u2009ps.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Photoinduced Enhancement of the Charge Density Wave Amplitude

Andrej Singer; Sheena Patel; Roopali Kukreja; V. Uhlíř; James Wingert; S. Festersen; Diling Zhu; J. M. Glownia; Henrik T. Lemke; S. Nelson; M. Kozina; K. Rossnagel; M. Bauer; B. M. Murphy; O. M. Magnussen; Eric E. Fullerton; Oleg Shpyrko

Symmetry breaking and the emergence of order is one of the most fascinating phenomena in condensed matter physics. It leads to a plethora of intriguing ground states found in antiferromagnets, Mott insulators, superconductors, and density-wave systems. Exploiting states of matter far from equilibrium can provide even more striking routes to symmetry-lowered, ordered states. Here, we demonstrate for the case of elemental chromium that moderate ultrafast photoexcitation can transiently enhance the charge-density-wave (CDW) amplitude by up to 30% above its equilibrium value, while strong excitations lead to an oscillating, large-amplitude CDW state that persists above the equilibrium transition temperature. Both effects result from dynamic electron-phonon interactions, providing an efficient mechanism to selectively transform a broad excitation of the electronic order into a well-defined, long-lived coherent lattice vibration. This mechanism may be exploited to transiently enhance order parameters in other systems with coupled degrees of freedom.


Structural Dynamics | 2016

Activation of coherent lattice phonon following ultrafast molecular spin-state photo-switching: A molecule-to-lattice energy transfer

Andrea Marino; Marco Cammarata; Samir F. Matar; Jean-François Létard; Guillaume Chastanet; Matthieu Chollet; J. M. Glownia; Henrik T. Lemke; Eric Collet

We combine ultrafast optical spectroscopy with femtosecond X-ray absorption to study the photo-switching dynamics of the [Fe(PM-AzA)2(NCS)2] spin-crossover molecular solid. The light-induced excited spin-state trapping process switches the molecules from low spin to high spin (HS) states on the sub-picosecond timescale. The change of the electronic state (<50 fs) induces a structural reorganization of the molecule within 160 fs. This transformation is accompanied by coherent molecular vibrations in the HS potential and especially a rapidly damped Fe-ligand breathing mode. The time-resolved studies evidence a delayed activation of coherent optical phonons of the lattice surrounding the photoexcited molecules.


Nature Communications | 2016

The origin of incipient ferroelectricity in lead telluride.

M. P. Jiang; M. Trigo; Ivana Savić; S. Fahy; Eamonn Murray; Crystal Bray; J. Clark; T. Henighan; M. Kozina; Matthieu Chollet; J. M. Glownia; M. C. Hoffmann; Diling Zhu; Olivier Delaire; Andrew F. May; Brian C. Sales; Aaron M. Lindenberg; P. Zalden; Tomohiko Sato; R. Merlin; David A. Reis

The interactions between electrons and lattice vibrations are fundamental to materials behaviour. In the case of group IV–VI, V and related materials, these interactions are strong, and the materials exist near electronic and structural phase transitions. The prototypical example is PbTe whose incipient ferroelectric behaviour has been recently associated with large phonon anharmonicity and thermoelectricity. Here we show that it is primarily electron-phonon coupling involving electron states near the band edges that leads to the ferroelectric instability in PbTe. Using a combination of nonequilibrium lattice dynamics measurements and first principles calculations, we find that photoexcitation reduces the Peierls-like electronic instability and reinforces the paraelectric state. This weakens the long-range forces along the cubic direction tied to resonant bonding and low lattice thermal conductivity. Our results demonstrate how free-electron-laser-based ultrafast X-ray scattering can be utilized to shed light on the microscopic mechanisms that determine materials properties.

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Christoph Bostedt

Argonne National Laboratory

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James Cryan

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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John D. Bozek

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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N. Berrah

University of Connecticut

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Diling Zhu

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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L. Fang

Western Michigan University

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Ryan Coffee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Matthieu Chollet

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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